You are on page 1of 54

December 2019

Special Report • Global Outlook

2020 Vision
Forecasts
For the Year
Ahead
Contents

2020 GLOBAL OUTLOOK • BLOOMBERG ECONOMICS

Monetary easing will bear


Introduction
2
Europe and the fruit for the Asean-5
Middle East 34

Australia will chug ahead


Germany faces too many 35
pitfalls to rebound soon
21
Finding opportunity
on the frontier
France is buoyant, but trade 36
threats could change that
Global Outlook 22
The Americas
Is a global slowdown inevitable? Italy will limp from one
A lot is up in the air crisis to another Canada can count on Ottawa
23 for an assist
4
38
Three scenarios for trade— Spain’s economy is cooling fast
24 After pension reform, Brazil
and a truce is only one
6 Sweden’s long season of gloom is hungry for growth
39
25
U.S. consumers continue
to carry the day Testing Putin’s long game Uncertainty in Mexico imperils
8 26
growth
40
Calculating the odds Turkey has climbed out of
of a U.S. recession recession, but risks remain Argentina’s new leader has no
10 27
time to waste to spur a pickup
41
China tries to stave Geopolitics, oil prices—not
off a further slowdown much looks rosy in Saudi Arabia Sluggish economies—again—
12 28
in Chile, Colombia, and Peru
42
Is Japan headed for What’s behind falling oil prices
a recession? 29
Scoring how emerging-markets
14 economies will do
The ECB can’t protect the Asia 44

euro region from trade wars No, Mr. Trump, the dollar isn’t
16 At last, a recovery in India at a record high. Here’s why
31 48
Draghi’s legacy,
Lagarde’s challenge The trade war will tamp South
17 Korea’s prospects
32
A snap election and Brexit: Bloomberg Economics’
Reading the U.K. tea leaves Hong Kong’s long recession Country Forecasts
18 33 48
Introduction

The global economy started 2019


with hopes for a trade truce, only for
those to be dashed as waves of tariff
increases hit exports and dented
confidence. In 2020 the pattern could
be repeated. A U.S.-China deal, if it
sticks, would put monetary policy
back on hold and a floor under sliding
growth. If it doesn’t—a distinct
possibility given the gap between the
two sides and the pressures of the U.S.
presidential election—expect growth
to grind lower and central banks to
wrack their brains for how to add
stimulus when interest rates are
already so low.

SPECIAL REPO RT • B LO O M B ERG ECO N O M ICS


Global
Outlook
Global Outlook

Can the World Dodge a Major


Slowdown? A Lot Needs to Go Right
By TOM ORLIK

HERE’S WHAT HAS TO GO RIGHT for the world economy to steer clear to contraction so far in the second half of 2019. That’s pushed
of a deeper slowdown in the next 12 months. Trade tensions have manufacturing into recession, triggered a slowdown in investment,
to ease. Jobs growth and consumption in the U.S. need to remain and hit factory employment. In a worst-case scenario of rising
robust. And central bank stimulus has to gain at least some trac- tariffs, pervasive uncertainty, and a 10% drop in global equity
tion. It would also help if Britain escaped its Brexit impasse, Hong markets, Bloomberg Economics estimates the price tag for the
Kong found a way to end violent confrontations, and Argentina’s trade war could add up to $2.7 trillion by the end of 2021.
new government wins the confidence of skeptical markets. To put a floor under global growth, the first requirement is
Some of those will go right. Not all of them will. The U.S. and for trade tensions to ease. A phase one deal between China and
China face a further slide in growth. Germany is flirting with reces- the U.S. is under negotiation. China has offered commitments on
sion. An orderly Brexit would allow the U.K. to dodge a downturn. commodity imports in return for the suspension of planned tariff
With an election looming, that’s far from guaranteed. increases. The Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit that
Global growth is increasingly lackluster. Bloomberg was to be held in Chile—mooted as the venue for a deal—was
­Economics’ global gross domestic product tracker shows the pace canceled amid mass protests. With fading growth sharpening
of expansion has slowed to 2.4% in the third quarter, from 4.7% incentives on both sides, a mini deal remains possible.
at the start of 2018. In the U.S., the Institute for Supply Manage- It isn’t guaranteed. Past U.S.-China talks have ended with an
ment (ISM) factory gauge has fallen to its weakest level since 2009. assurance that talks are back on track, only for a breakdown to
China’s GDP is expanding at the slowest pace since the early 1990s. follow immediately after. This time around, with potential flashpoints
Germany’s economy contracted in the second quarter, and early related to Hong Kong, Huawei Technologies Co., and human rights,
indicators suggest weakness persists. Japan has just hiked its the stakes are higher and the chances of success lower. To have a
sales tax; the last time it did so, growth went into reverse. meaningful impact on 2020 growth, any mini deal would have to
True, some of the latest developments look positive. The include canceling December’s tariff increase and provide assurance
U.S. and China are working on a “phase one” trade deal. The that the truce would hold.
­chances of a no-deal Brexit have been reduced. Given the expe- Another necessary ingredient for continued global growth
rience of the past two years, though, investors are rightly wary of is that U.S. consumers remain resilient. There are risks. The pace
false dawns. As the International Monetary Fund’s new managing of job creation has slowed, and consumer sentiment took a tumble
director, Kristalina Georgieva, has said, amid a synchronized slow- over the summer. But unemployment is at its lowest level in
down of major economies, the global outlook is “precarious.” 50 years and wage growth is steady above 3%. In a ­consumer-driven
The room for policy to fight a slowdown is limited. The economy, even with stalling investment and stumbling exports,
­European Central Bank is experimenting with deeper negative rates that’s enough to keep growth not too far from potential. We believe
and a fresh round of quantitative easing. But even many inside the a combination of job creation above 100,000 a month and, if
ECB are questioning the effectiveness of these steps—and their needed, further Fed cuts should mean the world’s biggest economy
potential costs. For the Bank of Japan, options are even more limited. dodges recession.
China’s high debt limits its ability to splurge on more c
­ redit-fueled A number of other things could surprise us on the upside
investments. In the U.S., elevated uncertainty about trade policy and add support to global growth:
will dent the effectiveness of Federal Reserve rate cuts. • China might outperform. We think limits to stimulus will see
The trade war is the biggest drag. Sweeping U.S.-China tariffs GDP growth slow to 5.8% in the fourth quarter, down from 6.4% a
have taken global trade from growth of 4.1% in the first half of 2018 year earlier. At the same time, we also see a lot of ­infrastructure

4 SPECIAL REPO RT • B LO O M B ERG ECO N O M ICS


Global Outlook

spending in the pipeline. It’s possible state investment will rise • In Argentina, it’s possible that incoming President Alberto
enough to deliver an upside surprise. Fernández could follow the example of Mexico’s Andrés Manuel
• A decisive outcome for the U.K. election—slated for Dec. 12— López Obrador by pivoting from a populist campaign to relatively
would remove an overhang of Brexit uncertainty. Relative to the orthodox policies.
current morass, a win for either the Conservatives, with a mandate Where does that leave the outlook for global growth? Our base
to deliver on the withdrawal agreement, or the opposition, with the case is a slowdown for most (including the U.S., China, and Japan)
prospect of a second referendum, would mean a boost to confidence. and recession for a few (Germany and, if no-deal Brexit returns, the
• With the ECB ratcheting up the pressure on governments U.K.). Risks to that forecast are tilted to the downside. If a fading
to do their part, we could see a significant loosening of fiscal policy manufacturing sector in the U.S. and the euro zone proves a leading
in key euro zone economies, including Germany, in the 2020 indicator of weakness in the larger services sector, the downturn will
budgets countries adopt in the fourth quarter of 2019. be more widespread.

Slower and Slower …


Nations shaded by region: Europe Asia and Pacific Americas Africa

Bubble size represents nominal GDP Percentage-point difference between Q3 ’19


real GDP growth and year-ago period*

South Africa
$10t 1
$1t

Brazil
South Korea U.K.
Italy
0

China Indonesia France


Canada Japan
$11.5t

Russia U.S.
$18.7t -1

Australia Germany

-2.0 -1.5 -1.0 - 0.5 0 0.5 -2


Percentage-point difference between Q3 ’19 GDP growth and 10-year average*

*Figures for Australia, Brazil, Germany, India, Indonesia, Japan, Russia, South Africa, and the U.K. are for Q2 ’19.
Source: Bloomberg Economics

5
Global Outlook

Truce, War, or Peace:


Three Scenarios for 2020 Trade
By TOM ORLIK and DAN HANSON

THE STORY OF THE GLOBAL ECONOMY in 2019 has been the story of • The U.S. delayed its October tariff increase. If it takes the
trade conflict. An escalating U.S.-China trade war, acrimony planned Dec. 15 move off the table, and China reciprocates, the
­between Japan and South Korea, the risk of a hard Brexit, and U.S. two countries would dodge a blow to annual GDP of 0.1% and 0.2%,
threats against Mexico, Canada, and Europe have conspired to respectively.
drag growth to its lowest level since the financial crisis. • The larger impact would come if tariffs were suspended
What will 2020 look like? Focusing on the U.S.-China trade and policy uncertainty reduced. Our analysis suggests the
conflict, we forecast there will be no escalation, but no respite ­whiplash-inducing reversals in trade talks add up to a drag of 0.6%
either. That said, the conflict has taken surprising turns in the past, of GDP for the U.S. and a 1% drag for China.
and could do so again. We map out three scenarios: truce without
respite (our base case); war (damaging, but not impossible); and
peace (unlikely, given the scale of the problems). How Bad Could Trade Wars Get?

1) Truce Without Respite Percentage-point impact on global GDP

The U.S.-China trade war has been damaging to both sides. China’s Current tariffs* Uncertainty shock (U.S., China, Europe)
30% punitive tariff on all U.S.-China trade 10% fall in equity prices
gross domestic product growth has slowed to the lowest level
since the early 1990s. In the U.S., job creation and business surveys
0
have slumped. Even as economic conditions deteriorate, agree-
ment on the major ­issues—market access, intellectual-property
protection, and i­ ndustrial subsidies—remains elusive. - 0.5
The obvious solution, and the one toward which both sides
are groping, is a mini deal: The U.S. suspends tariff increases;
China restores agricultural imports to their pre-trade-war levels. -1.0

The cancellation of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation s­ ummit


in Chile—mooted as the venue for signing a deal—complicates
Q2 ’18 Q4 ’22 -1.5
the picture. An agreement before the end of the year remains a
strong possibility. *Assumes average U.S. tariffs of 17% and average Chinese tariffs of 20%
The impact on growth depends a little on the suspension of Source: Bloomberg Economics

tariffs and a lot on the tone of negotiations that follow:

6 SPECIAL REPO RT • B LO O M B ERG ECO N O M ICS


The December tariff increase would leave essentially all analysis puts the cost at 1.1% of GDP in the U.S. and 1.6% in China,
sales from China to the U.S.—including smartphones, tablets, and in addition to the cost of existing tariffs.
laptops—facing a punitive levy. That’s a cost both sides will be
eager to avoid, making a mini deal more likely. A shift to a more 3) Peace
transparent and predictable negotiation process to resolve What if there’s a sudden outbreak of peace? If negotiations were
­outstanding issues is less certain. Indeed, given President Trump’s narrowly confined to the protection of intellectual property,
known proclivities, and the additional pressure on him because ­ensuring market access, and ending forced technology transfer,
of the 2020 election and impeachment inquiry, it seems unlikely. that would be possible. The reality is they aren’t. With many on
Our base case: Markets will get a truce, but not a respite. both sides seeing the conflict through the broader lens of East vs.
Tariffs will stay on hold. Uncertainty will remain. West, ­authoritarianism vs. democracy, socialism vs. capitalism,
the ­chances of a comprehensive deal look vanishingly small.
2) War Still, if there’s one thing that’s become clear in the past year,
A mini deal is likely. But it’s far from certain. Past talks, including it’s that trade talks can take unexpected turns. If tariffs are rolled
top-level meetings between Trump and Chinese President Xi back to 25% on $50 billion in trade in both directions and uncer-
Jinping in Buenos Aires at the end of 2018 and in Osaka in the tainty ebbs back to pre-trade-war levels, the U.S. and China could
summer of 2019, have ended with assurances of progress, only benefit from a GDP boost of 0.8% and 1.4%, respectively.
for a breakdown to immediately follow. This time around, rancor-
ous disputes over free speech, human rights, and national s­ ecurity A Note on Average Tariffs
add to the difficulty. In 2017 average U.S. tariffs on Chinese goods were about 3% and
The U.S. presidential election is another complication. Since average Chinese tariffs on U.S. goods were a little less than 7%.
Bill Clinton ran for president in 1992, candidates have competed to Over the course of the trade war, the U.S. has imposed tariffs of
be tough on China. Trump might be an exception. He’s been so tough 25% on $250 billion in Chinese goods and 15% on about $110 bil-
on China that he could cut a deal and still claim to have extracted lion. China has imposed additional duties at various rates on
more concessions than any previous president. Still, at a minimum, $110 billion. Bloomberg Economics calculates that average U.S.
the drumbeat of the campaign will be a complicating factor. tariffs on Chinese goods are now about 17%. Average Chinese
In a risk scenario, where punitive tariffs escalate to 30% on tariffs on U.S. goods are about 20%. In our risk scenario of 30%
all U.S.-China trade, uncertainty remains elevated, and global ­equity punitive tariffs, average U.S. tariffs would increase to 33% and
markets sell off, the blow to growth would be significant. Our Chinese tariffs to 37%.

7
Global Outlook

Consumers Will Continue to Shore Up


The Record U.S. Expansion
By CARL RICCADONNA and YELENA SHULYATYEVA

DECELERATING U.S. ECONOMIC activity in the second half of 2019 these ­m easures is approaching $50 billion, up from about
provides a reasonable template for what to expect in the coming $33 billion in 2018. A slower-growth economy is less equipped to
year, as several drivers of growth fade and consumers are left absorb this shock.
dominating the outlook to an even greater degree than usual. Further rounds of tariff increases are conditional on con-
In 2020, Bloomberg Economics estimates real gross structive trade talks in the fourth quarter of 2019. The hike in tariffs
­domestic product growth will decelerate to the slowest pace since from 25% to 30%, scheduled for October, was suspended. However,
2016, but it will be strong enough for the U.S. economy to avoid an additional $156 billion of imports—mainly consumer goods—will
slipping into a downturn. be subject to 15% tariffs in mid-December unless a deal between
Nonetheless, slower growth will cast a chill over a slew of China and the U.S. is reached. These tariffs carry a price tag of
economic indicators, such as industrial surveys and job creation, roughly $13 billion and $23 billion, respectively, bringing the total
which could in turn impact voter sentiment before the 2020 pres- for 2019 tariffs to roughly $83 billion—2.5 times the cost in 2018.
idential election. In our baseline scenario, the Federal Reserve will A slower pace of growth, larger tariff price tag, and less room
put i­nterest-rate cuts on hold in the coming year, yet will stand for the impact to be buffered by compressed producer margins
ready to provide accommodation, if needed, against downside will make the cost of trade tensions more evident in coming
economic risks. ­economic data compared with last year’s.
GDP growth is poised to decelerate to 2% in 2020, compared In addition to the direct cost from tariffs, households and
with an estimated 2.2% in 2019. Growth prospects will largely businesses are increasingly acknowledging that there won’t be a
depend on consumers, as business investment and exports lan- swift resolution to trade talks. The resulting psychological malaise
guish because of trade tensions, economic uncertainty, and slowing is leading to a sharp curtailment of capital investment; the risk is
global growth. Growth won’t slow enough for the unemployment that defensive posturing among hiring managers will weaken labor
rate to begin drifting higher. conditions, too.
Bloomberg Economics expects the Fed to remain on hold in Consumer attitudes have demonstrated impressive resil-
2020, having provided an adequate amount of insurance cuts in 2019 ience over the first three quarters of 2019, but have started to
to offset challenges related to trade tensions; however, the central
bank could ease further to ameliorate inversion of the yield curve.
A Tax Cut Tailwind Is Consumed by the Trade War
Trade War Headwinds Are Stiffening
U.S. Q4 real GDP, year-over-year change,
Despite exports accounting for a relatively small share of GDP com- seasonally adjusted
Trump tax cuts
pared with other developed economies, the U.S. isn’t immune to and trade war
trade-related headwinds. The economy, at least superficially, 3%
­appeared to take tariffs in stride in 2018. Neither GDP growth nor
consumer inflation showed much deviation from the trends that had
prevailed over the previous five years. However, trade tensions did 2
extract a toll, eroding much of the boost from the Trump tax reforms.
In 2018, a year when growth was initially poised to be the strongest BE forecast
1
in a decade, economic uncertainty instead rattled consumers and
dampened businesses’ plans for capital investment and hiring.
These same obstacles continue to intensify: Earlier in 2019, 2010 2020 0
the 10% tariffs on $200 billion of Chinese imports increased to
25%, and new tariffs of 15% on roughly $111 billion of additional Sources: Bureau of Economic Analysis, Bloomberg Economics
imports were implemented in September. The economic cost of

8 SPECIAL REPO RT • B LO O M B ERG ECO N O M ICS


Global Outlook

show some more recent signs of erosion. A weakening consumer As the chart below illustrates, consumer spending typically
outlook would materially diminish growth prospects. tracks relatively closely with the wage and salary trend, particularly
in the middle-to-late stages of economic cycles. Wage and salary
A Growth Recession Isn’t in the Cards growth has averaged just below 5% over the past year, so account-
Trade tensions and slowing global growth dominate Bloomberg ing for roughly 2% inflation, a baseline forecast of 3% consumer
Economics’ medium-term outlook. We expect business fixed spending is reasonable.
­investment to essentially grind to a halt amid economic u ­ ncertainty, Bloomberg Economics projects a somewhat weaker profile
exports to wither in response to a combination of debilitating d ­ ollar to take into account reduced hiring momentum and a more con-
strength and sluggish external demand, and housing to show only servative outlook among consumers. Our baseline forecast is for
a feeble response to declining interest rates. Government s­ pending inflation-adjusted consumer spending of 2.3% in the coming year,
will provide a moderate positive contribution. resulting in overall GDP growth of 2%.
The pace of growth will therefore be inordinately tied to house- With the pace of growth decelerating from 2.6% in the first
hold demand. Consumers have shown some signs of restraint of late: half of 2019, much of the economic data will be sluggish. This is
After posting the second-strongest performance of the cycle in the already becoming evident in industrial surveys, such as the Insti-
second quarter, personal spending showed clear signs of downshifting tute for Supply Management’s slumping manufacturing index.
in the third quarter—more consistent with the underlying income trend. However, the slowdown won’t be so pronounced as to result in
The savings rate has edged toward the high end of its range rising unemployment—a condition economists refer to as a “growth
over the past five years, while at the same time households’ expec- recession.” Bloomberg Economics estimates that consumer spend-
tations for the future have deteriorated relative to their assessment ing would need to slow below 2% for overall growth to decelerate
of current conditions. These are telltale signals that consumers below the threshold (roughly 1.4%) where the unemployment rate
are becoming more cautious. Even so, with unemployment at the would drift higher.
lowest level in 50 years, minimal slack in the labor market should
support the wage and salary income trend and, in turn, provide a The Fed Will Stay Put, But Is Ready to Act
backstop to consumers. We anticipate the Fed will remain on hold next year after having
provided an estimated 100 basis points of cuts in 2019. If the
federal funds rate remains above 10-year Treasury yields at the
In Consumers We Trust 2019 yearend, then further reductions will follow in 2020—though
officials will be increasingly reluctant to act as the election nears.
U.S. indicators, year-over-year change in 12-month moving average
At present, our base case is that the midcycle easing will
Personal income (wages and salaries) Personal spending
prove adequate to stabilize growth, though our central scenario
8% is exceptionally vulnerable to changes in the trade outlook. A rapid
reduction of trade tensions would mitigate the need for further
accommodation, but continued escalation would push
4
­policymakers closer to the zero bound.
To be sure, the U.S. economy is poised for a tough slog over
0 the next few quarters, but conditions remain fertile for a robust
rebound when and if trade headwinds subside: Interest rates are
1/2014 9/2019 -4 significantly accommodative; labor scarcity is keeping a floor under
wage pressures; and corporate balance sheets and profit growth
Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis are primed to support faster hiring and investment when animal
spirits return.

9
Global Outlook

As Risks Rise, the Odds


Of a U.S. Recession Are 25%
By ELIZA WINGER, YELENA SHULYATYEVA, and ANDREW HUSBY

BLOOMBERG ECONOMICS’ NEW U.S. recession probability indicator smart policy execution by the U.S. Federal Reserve should enable
shows the chance of a downturn within the next 12 months is the record-long expansion to extend further.
about 25%. That’s a warning sign but not yet a panic signal. The Forecasting a recession is challenging, especially over a
reading is higher than it was a year ago but significantly lower than long time horizon. Signals become clearer three to six months
before the last recession. before a downturn and more obvious the closer it gets. Modeling
• The yield curve is the workhorse of recession probability works best when analysts see the whites of a recession’s eyes,
models and has a strong track record of predicting past down- but the most valuable forecast is the one that predicts risks well
turns. This time, quantitative easing and depressed term premi- ahead of time.
ums mean that—on its own—the yield curve may not be sending Given the limitations, our model used a range of financial
a reliable signal. market, real economy, and economic imbalance indicators to gauge
• Reflecting that, our model incorporates a range of financial the immediate, 3-, 6-, and 12-month risk of recession.
market indicators, activity data, and measures of background To provide a reading on whether the economy is on the
imbalances. The flat yield curve is flashing a warning. Other indi- ­immediate cusp of a recession, we looked at the level of jobless
cators, such as accelerating real wage growth, suggest recession claims, stock prices relative to trend, and the Institute for Supply
odds are limited. Management orders index reweighted to reflect the share of man-
• The model outcome—a 25% chance of recession in the ufacturing and services in the economy. Taken together, these
next year—aligns with our view that robust consumption will variables provide reliable signals on turning points. The concurrent
­continue to support growth close to potential. Amid trade tensions, recession probability is close to zero—the U.S. is not on the brink
of a downturn.
At the three-month horizon, our model focuses on financial
Flashing Yellow, But Not Yet Red market variables. In addition to stock movements, we looked at
the slope of the 10-year/3-month yield curve and changes in high-
Probability of a U.S. recession within 0 to 12 months
yield spreads. The yield curve is signaling a heightened probabil-
ity of recession. Credit spreads suggest investors don’t see fund-
Recession
100% ing pressures or an imminent downturn in activity. Based on those
indicators, the three-month recession probability is about 5%.
Looking six months ahead, the Conference Board’s Leading
Economic Index is a valuable predictor. The index combines
50 10 ­financial market and activity indicators that tend to move before
changes in the overall economy. Our probability indicator, based
on the index, implies a less than 10% chance of a recession start-
1/1992 9/2019 0 ing in six months.
Extending the forecast horizon, we relied less on financial
Source: Bloomberg Economics market variables, which are standard in the academic literature,
and looked at a broader set of data. Looking 12 months ahead, we

10 SPECIAL REPO RT • B LO O M B ERG ECO N O M ICS


Global Outlook

applied a probit model individually to data within three tranches: 6-month, and 12-month horizons. At around 25%, the chance of
financial indicators, gauges of economic activity and consumer recession generated by our model is consistent with our view that
sentiment, and measures of i­ mbalances in the corporate sector: the current economic expansion will continue. Our base case is
• Within the financial indicators group, we looked at the that robust consumption will maintain growth close to potential,
10-year/3-month Treasury spread, as well as corporate credit despite elevated risks from a global slowdown and trade uncer-
spreads. In addition, we looked at the difference between nominal tainties.
gross domestic product and the federal funds rate—an indicator A 25% probability is markedly up from the level a year ear-
of policy tightness that tracks closely with past downturns. lier, when our model pointed to about a 15% chance of recession.
• For activity, we focused on consumer sentiment and labor It’s also down from the level over the summer, and below a read-
market indicators. ing of 50% a year before the Great Recession. The drop from sum-
• To assess underlying imbalances, we monitored movements mer highs is a reminder that financial market indicators are noisy
in corporate profit margins, financing gaps, and interest payments and volatile, sometimes contributing to false positive signals. The
relative to corporate profits. low level compared with the period before the Great Recession
Taking all those indicators together, the probability of the is a reminder that, despite high temperatures in the markets and
U.S. economy heading into recession 12 months out is about 15%. heightened risks in the world economy, in many respects e­ conomic
The headline odds of a recession within 12 months are based fundamentals in the U.S. remain sound.
on the product of “no recession” probabilities at the zero, 3-month,
A Note on Forecasting
Assessing the state of the U.S. economy a year in advance is chal-
Recession Probabilities at Different Time Horizons lenging, particularly when dealing with a binary outcome variable.
One consequence of that: In our model, the probability of reces-
Probability of a U.S. recession
sion at a 12-month horizon never gets close to 100%, even as the
Over 0 to 12 months 0-month horizon 3-month 6-month 12-month
cumulative probability of recession from zero to 12 months q ­ uickly
nears 100% as recession approaches. This is a feature of any
Recession
100% model that seeks to identify recession at a 12-month horizon,
including the New York Fed’s yield curve model.
At shorter horizons, noisy financial markets and volatile
leading indicators can result in false positives. In some cases, the
50 model sends an accurate signal of risks, but real-time policy
­responses from the Fed ease fears, boost activity, and head off
the chances of a downturn.
1/1992 9/2019 0 Bloomberg Economics recognizes the limitations of the
recession probability model, but still views it as a valuable tool
Source: Bloomberg Economics providing a high-frequency, consistent gauge on the evolution of
recession risk.

11
Global Outlook

China’s Growth Could


Fall Below 6%
By CHANG SHU, DAVID QU, and QIAN WAN

CHINA’S GROWTH IN 2020 could fall below 6%. ­Challenges from the • We project the one-year loan prime rate (LPR)—the new
trade war, global slowdown, and weak business sentiment mean de facto interest-rate benchmark—will continue to fall in small yet
the economy will continue to lose momentum at least into the frequent steps in 2020. The de jure benchmark lending rate could
first half of 2020. We don’t expect a crash landing, but we do see be adjusted from time to time to reflect the cumulative changes
an extended slowdown. in the LPR.
Intensified policy support is a necessity and a near certainty,
but officials are likely to use their policy ammunition carefully to make Multiple Obstacles in 2020
sure each measure counts. GDP growth avoided falling below 6% in the third quarter, but it
• We expect growth to slow to 5.8% in the fourth quarter of slowed more than the consensus forecast. On balance, the trends
this year from the period a year earlier, following a below-­consensus in industrial production, fixed-asset investment, and exports point
expansion of 6% in the third quarter. For 2019 as a whole, growth to slowing momentum. It will be challenging for the economy to
should ease to 6.1%, close to the lower end of the 6% to 6.5% find a firm footing in the near term. Details of a “phase one” trade
official target range. deal with the U.S. are still unclear, and U.S. tariffs of 15% to 25%
• For 2020, we forecast growth will slow further, to 5.7%. on $360 billion of imports from China remain in place—a significant
• Policy is likely to be loosened on all fronts—fiscal, ­monetary, external headwind.
and combining structural elements. This should help put a floor What’s more, a negative feedback mechanism has kicked
under growth. in: The trade-war-induced slowdown in China is exacerbating a
• At this stage of intensive easing, the People’s Bank of C ­ hina downturn in global growth, which in turn hurts demand for Chinese
will probably continue to combine reductions in the reserve exports. Squeezed corporate profits and weak business sentiment
­requirement ratio (RRR) and in interest rates. suggest it will take a long time for the private sector to stabilize.
Headline consumer price inflation has picked up on surging
pork prices. But the underlying trend in prices is weak, as ­reflected
The Central Bank Deploys Its Tools in lackluster core inflation and falling producer prices.
China monetary policy instruments
Reserve requirement ratio for major banks (left axis) Interest rate* (right axis) Government Spending Has Constraints
The objective now appears to be to prevent a sharp slowdown,
Intensive Intensive not rev up growth. The government has been cautious in d ­ ispensing
25% 8%
tightening easing general stimulus compared with previous easing cycles. This­
­reflects a few considerations. First, uncertainties associated with
the trade war mean that a cautious use of policy ammunition is
prudent. Second, there’s a realization of challenges in making the
15 6
impact of stimulus measures felt. The central bank, for example,
is grappling with the difficulties of lowering funding costs for cor-
porations, especially small private companies. The focus is on
making each measure count.
5 1/2000 9/2019 4
Fiscal policy will probably continue to focus on infrastructure
*Before August 2019, the one-year benchmark rate. After, the one-year loan prime rate.
spending and implementing tax cuts. The 2019 quota for special
Sources: PBOC, Bloomberg Economics bond issuance—a source of funding for infrastructure investment
by local governments—has been used up. The aim was to ­accelerate

12 SPECIAL REPO RT • B LO O M B ERG ECO N O M ICS


Global Outlook

placement of the proceeds for big projects by October. There are It also overhauled its interest-rate framework in August, introduc-
plans to front-load special bond issuance for next year. ing a loan prime rate formulated under a new, more market-based
The government recently announced proposals to raise mechanism. This rate has been guided down in August-October,
local governments’ share in fiscal revenue. This will increase their taking it 15 bps below the benchmark lending rate. Also n
­ oteworthy,
fiscal capacity and incentives to follow such central government it’s moving in much smaller increments than the typical 25-bp
stimulus measures as tax cuts. shifts in benchmark rates.
One problem with relying on infrastructure investment to This pattern of paced easing through a combination of the
prop up growth is that it’s not as easy to ramp up spending now RRR and interest-rate reductions is set to continue. We expect
as in previous cycles. This isn’t only because of a much bigger 200 bps of reductions to the RRR and a series of incremental cuts
base. China’s public investment per capita is almost as high as to the LPR, totaling 50 bps from the fourth quarter of 2019 to the
that of some advanced economies, suggesting limited room for end of 2020.
rapid expansion. Investment per capita by the private sector— The cuts in the LPR, which sets prices for new loans, have
critical to sustainable longer-term growth—is lagging ­significantly. been much smaller than typical 25-bp changes when the bench-
mark lending rate was used. The benchmark rate retains a key role
Combining Monetary Policy Tools in that it governs the funding cost of existing loans. We expect it
The PBOC has historically tended to combine the use of RRR and to be adjusted in two steps by the end of 2020 to reflect cumula-
interest-rate tools in intensive periods of easing or tightening. This tive changes in the LPR.
was the case during the tightening phases of 2006-07 and 2010-11,
and the easing phase of 2015-16. The Yuan Breaching 7 and the “Impossible Trinity”
The latest easing also combines these tools. The central The yuan’s depreciation in early August beyond 7 per dollar—a
bank announced a 50-basis-point, broad-based RRR cut and a long-defended level—was significant. The move, which came after
100-bp, targeted RRR cut for eligible regional banks in September. the U.S. threatened to hike tariffs further, was in line with our
expectation that the PBOC would focus on controlling volatility
rather than on a specific level. The central bank succeeded in
China’s Economic Forecasts quickly anchoring expectations after 7 was breached, stemming
disorderly currency adjustment.
China indicators
The yuan’s decline shifted the PBOC’s position within the
Actual Forecast
“Impossible Trinity,” a doctrine stipulating that a country can’t
Q1 ’19 Q2 ’19 Q3 ’19 Q4 ’19 2018 2019 2020 maintain an independent monetary policy, an open capital account,
and a fixed exchange rate at the same time. The currency flexibil-
GDP growth forecast (Oct.)
ity creates room to maneuver on the other two policy fronts, par-
Tariffs on all Chinese goods, 6.4 6.2 6.0 5.8 6.6 6.1 5.7
rates at 15%-30% by yearend ticularly on monetary policy, in addition to helping absorb some
of the trade-war shock.
Consumer price index
The signals from Bloomberg Economics’ daily and monthly
Year-to-date 1.8 2.2 2.5 2.6 2.1 2.6 2.8
stress gauges suggest the yuan should find some support in the
Loan prime rate near term. A faster pace of monetary easing by the U.S. Federal
One-year 4.31 4.31 4.20 4.10 4.31 4.10 3.70 Reserve relative to the PBOC is one such source of support. This
Source: Bloomberg Economics reprieve, though, is fragile given the downside risks from China’s
slowing growth and the trade war.

13
Global Outlook

In Japan, Recession Threats Emerge


By YUKI MASUJIMA

JAPAN’S ECONOMY IS LOSING MOMENTUM as 2020 approaches. W


­ eaker hike, but we expect a quick rebound that would dodge a r­ ecession.
external demand is taking the wind out of the manufacturing ­sector, • We see gross domestic product growth at 0.8% in 2019
and a higher sales tax threatens to dent consumption. Our reces- and a slowdown to 0.2% in 2020.
sion risk model has flashed a tentative warning. • Falling bond yields underline increasing market expectations
For now, we think a recession will be avoided. Public that the BOJ could try to squeeze more stimulus out of its monetary
­expenditure is increasing, investment by nonmanufacturers is framework this year. Our view is that any benefits of extra stimulus
holding up, and spending on services is steady. Sales at super- would be countered by heavier strain on the­financial system.
markets and convenience stores rebounded from a sharp dip • Our baseline scenario assumes mild yen appreciation to
after the sales tax went up on Oct. 1, according to daily data. ­Taken 105 per dollar at the end of 2020. Unexpected yen strength beyond
together, the economy is showing resilience. 100 would damp inflation and hurt competitiveness, likely
That said, the downward pressures are strong. The U.S.-­ ­prompting BOJ easing.
China trade war and slowing global growth are damping exports. Leading and coincident indicators compiled by the Cabinet
The higher sales tax will squeeze consumers and could push the Office give a fairly reliable read on the economic cycle.
economy over the edge. Our view is that the Bank of Japan will • The leading indicator, which includes 11 data series, has
take a long view—while we acknowledge rising chances of a pre- tumbled since late 2017, reaching the lowest level since 2009 in
emptive boost to stimulus, our baseline scenario is for a steady August—mainly on weaker signals on consumer confidence, the
policy course through next year. producer inventory/shipments ratio, small and midsize e ­ nterprises’
• The latest reading on our recession probability model was sales outlook, and the Nikkei 225.
above a key threshold associated with the past six recessions. • The coincident indicator, which comprises nine different
• The economy will take a hit in the fourth quarter from the tax data series including industrial production, retail sales, and

The Likelihood of a Recession Is Growing

Japan recession probability index


Actual Six-month moving average

Recession Great East Sales


1.0
Japan tax hike
Earthquake

0.5

1/1985 8/2019 0

Sources: Bloomberg Economics, Cabinet Office

14 SPECIAL REPO RT • B LO O M B ERG ECO N O M ICS


Global Outlook

­overtime working hours, has shown some resilience.


Bloomberg Economics’ recession probability model uses Growth Will Lose Steam in 2020
the relationship between Japan’s leading and coincident indicators Japan real GDP
and past downturns to assess the likelihood of a recession s­ tarting Percentage-point contribution of selected components
over the next month. Private final consumption Private non-residential investment
• The latest reading came in at 0.76 in August—marking a Private residential investment Public demand Net exports
second straight month above the key threshold of 0.65 that was
BE forecast
associated with the past six recessions. 2%
• That isn’t yet a definitive recession signal. A couple of
months above 0.65 is cause for concern, but we’d want to see it 1
there for three to six months to increase our conviction. The six-
month moving average is 0.40, as of August.
0
• What’s more, readings above the 0.65 threshold aren’t
always followed by recession. The gauge exceeded 0.65 in 2011,
when Japan was clobbered by a massive earthquake, and in 2014, 2014 2020 -1
when the sales tax was last raised. Each time, the economy
­suffered sharp setbacks but managed to avoid outright recessions, Sources: Cabinet Office, Bloomberg Economics

as defined by the government.


• The recession indicator uses a probit model, regressing
the leading and the coincident indexes on the date of past down- the BOJ estimates at 0.7%), inflationary pressures will weaken.
turns to determine recession risk. The sample period is from • We see core inflation at 0.6% in 2019 and 0.4% in 2020,
­January 1985 to August 2019. excluding the effects of the sales tax hike. With the higher tax,
Much of our confidence in a benign scenario for the e ­ conomy we see core inflation at 0.8% and 1.1%, respectively. The BOJ’s
rests on our view that sources of resilience will prevail. ­target is 2%.
• Public spending has been stronger than expected this year Our BOJ policy conditions index, which takes in the VIX
and should do more to prop up growth. ­volatility gauge and Japan’s core inflation, indicates that the hurdle
• Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s administration has taken pains for additional stimulus is high, especially considering the financial
to smooth the transition to a higher sales tax level—applying costs for consumers and banks that’s associated with lower rates.
­exemptions on food and increasing spending on infrastructure, The message from the index could change, though, if the yen jumps.
child education, and subsidies for low-income elderly. A surge beyond 100 per dollar would likely flip the signal to easing.
• The service sector is also providing a largely under­ The Abe administration has earmarked much of additional
appreciated source of support for growth. This is helping to offset revenue expected from the higher sales tax for funding free
weakness in manufacturing as exporters gear down in response ­education and providing subsidies for the low-income elderly—
to weaker supply chain demand. leaving little extra to rein in the budget deficit. Even so, Abe isn’t
If the economy rides out the sales tax increase as we expect, likely to hesitate to add fiscal stimulus if the economy slumps into
pressure on the BOJ to boost stimulus should abate somewhat— a technical recession. The cost would be a further delay in shifting
allowing it to stay on hold through yearend 2020. Even so, it will the primary balance into surplus from deficit by fiscal 2025—yet
be tough going. ­another setback for fiscal consolidation for a country whose debt
• With growth likely to slow next year to below potential (which will amount to about 240% of GDP in 2019.

15
Global Outlook

The ECB Can’t Save the


Euro Area From Trade Wars
By DAVID POWELL and MAEVA COUSIN

THE EURO AREA’S FRAGILE recovery is being blown off course by states has historically helped defend the bloc against contractions
headwinds from abroad. Bloomberg Economics expects the bloc in its largest economy.
to avoid recession, but the risks of a contraction are elevated—a The services sector, which makes up about 75% of GDP, has
trade spat with the U.S. would cause some significant damage. buoyed the German economy as manufacturing has weakened. ­But
The European Central Bank has probably done all it’s willing to do there’s some evidence the shock to confidence from actual and
for now, and fiscal policy is unlikely to be loosened anytime soon. potential disruptions to trade is spreading: The services PMI has
Euro area gross domestic product growth is likely to be lack- tumbled recently. The deterioration since its peak has been broad-
luster for several quarters. We look for the economy to expand only based across the four largest economies of the monetary union.
0.2% in the fourth quarter and again in the first quarter of 2020. That Our GDP forecasts for the final quarter of 2019 and the first
tepid pace will do nothing to lift underlying inflation—we forecast the quarter of 2020 are below our estimate of trend growth of 0.3%
core measure may stand at 1.2% in 2020. With asset purchases tied to 0.4% a quarter. That means the pace of expansion will be insuf-
to actual inflation, we expect the ECB will still be buying bonds in 2021. ficient to ensure unemployment keeps falling, wage growth con-
The economic outlook has deteriorated. The Purchasing tinues to accelerate, and inflation keeps climbing.
­Managers Index for manufacturing has declined to levels not seen Economic conditions could deteriorate further. Time is running
since the monetary union’s existential crisis in 2012. Germany has out for progress on a European Union-U.S. trade deal. If talks collapse,
been the primary driver of the weakness. The country makes up 29% there’s a high chance euro region autos will be hit with hefty tariffs.
of the monetary union’s GDP, but it’s been responsible for about The deterioration in the euro area is occurring before the
60% of the decline of the PMI from its peak in December 2017. ECB managed to undo the damage to inflation from the economy’s
last heart attack, in 2012. As a result, the core inflation reading
has failed to come close to the target of less than, but close to,
Germany Drives Decline in Euro Area Manufacturing PMI 2% for more than a decade and now stands at about half that goal.
A new round of monetary stimulus should provide the e ­ conomy
Decline in euro area manufacturing PMI since December 2017
with some support, although it’s unlikely to lead to rapid improvement.
Percentage-point contribution:
Our estimates indicate about two years of asset purchases will be
Germany France Italy Rest of the euro area
required before the ECB can declare victory. Given the discord among
Governing Council members caused by the decision to relaunch
0% quantitative easing, the bar to a
­ dditional stimulus looks high.

The Last Game in Town


The limited room for easing monetary policy and its potentially
-8 muted impact will keep calls alive for fiscal stimulus. Former ECB
President Mario Draghi has loudly and clearly called on those
governments with fiscal space to loosen their purse strings.
12/2017 9/2019 -16 He has a point. The ECB has expanded its balance sheet to
a size that would have been previously unimaginable, and fiscal
Sources: Bloomberg Economics, Markit policy has done little to support the recovery. Government
­spending is increasing a bit this year, but the impact on the region’s
economy will probably be little more than a rounding error.
Germany’s economy has slowed primarily because global We don’t expect that to change much. Germany has the most
i­nvestment growth has ebbed, and that’s unlikely to turn around fiscal flexibility, but a deep recession at home would probably have
anytime soon. Until global trade policy becomes more predictable, to occur before Berlin pulls the trigger on stimulus. The bloc’s largest
business sentiment will remain weak and investment will be held back. economy is ignoring the cue from the Netherlands. And neither France,
The downturn in Germany won’t necessarily be disastrous Italy, nor Spain have much breathing room if they want to avoid falling
for the euro area as a whole. History shows that generally when foul of budget rules imposed by the European Commission in Brussels.
the German economy shrinks, growth in the euro region slows, As new ECB President Christine Lagarde settles in, her calls
but not enough to tip it into recession. Growth in other member for belt-loosening are also likely to go unheeded.

16 SPECIAL REPO RT • B LO O M B ERG ECO N O M ICS


Global Outlook

Lagarde Will Need All Her


Magic Touch to Reunite the ECB
By FERDINANDO GIUGLIANO

THE TRANSITION AT THE TOP of the European Central Bank is among ­ abine Lautenschläger, a member of the ECB’s executive board from
S
the most important changes affecting the euro zone in 2020. The ­Germany, resigned soon after the decision, which she had ­staunchly
ECB is the most powerful institution in the currency area. In the opposed. For good or ill, Draghi hasn’t been a man of compromise.
wake of the sovereign debt crisis at the start of this decade, Lagarde will be a different kind of president. A lawyer by
­investors regard it as the main guardian defending the integrity of training, and a former defense and finance minister in France, her
a still-fragile monetary union. emphasis will be much more in building bridges—across nations
The replacement of Mario Draghi with Christine Lagarde in and with the public. In a confirmation hearing at the European
November 2019 has been couched in terms of continuity. Lagarde Parliament, she vowed to make the central bank clearer to ordinary
has publicly supported her predecessor’s commitment to do people. “I want the people of the euro area to understand why
“whatever it takes” to protect the euro. Draghi has vowed that decisions are being made,” she told lawmakers. The contrast with
the ­changes he helped introduce in the central bank’s armory— Draghi is striking: “It’s important that the language being used
including asset purchases and negative interest rates—will outlive maintains the subtle distinction between the central banking
his presidency. system and politics,” he said in a hearing only a few weeks later.
And yet the two bring to the job very different qualities. For “It’s easy, in order to use the language of the people, to enter
all his remarkable political nous, Draghi was the ultimate ­technocrat. terrain that is not that of central banking but becomes politics.”
He believed in the power of his intuitions even at the cost of sac- Lagarde’s skills could come of great use at a time when
rificing consensus. Lagarde is more political: As the managing critics fear monetary policy is stretched and can do little to foster
director of the International Monetary Fund, she helped rebuild the r­ ecovery. The euro zone needs more help from fiscal policy,
the brand of an oft-loathed institution. The question is whether especially in countries such as Germany that have space to
her magic touch will suffice to hold the ECB together at a time of ­increase spending and cut taxes without risking a market crisis.
resurfacing divisions. It also needs to take steps toward creating a common budget,
There’s little doubt that Draghi leaves the ECB and the euro which can help countries when they face an isolated shock. While
area in much stronger shape than he found it at the end of 2011. Draghi has ­repeatedly advocated these changes, they’ve never
The monetary union was engulfed in a sovereign debt crisis, and occurred during his p ­ residency. At the IMF, Lagarde was used to
the central bank had just gambled with its reputation by raising reconciling the differences of her various shareholders. If anyone
interest rates twice in spite of a visible slowdown. Eight years can have a shot at addressing the long-standing deficiencies of
later, the ECB is still far from its objective of keeping inflation the monetary union, it’s her.
below, but close to, 2%. Yet most economists agree that, in the There’s a risk, however: Instead of advancing the effective-
absence of the measures Draghi helped introduce, the central ness of the currency union, she could lose the hard-fought gains
bank would be even further from hitting its inflation target. Some the ECB has made under Draghi. The deep division she encounters
go as far as thinking that without him, the monetary union wouldn’t as she walks into the central bank could be an ominous prelude
have survived in its current form. to what will come next. The heads of the national central banks,
Draghi carries remarkable intellectual heft, courtesy of his which have been sidelined during Draghi’s term, may seek a more
long career as an academic, treasury official, and central banker. collegial decision-making process, which could bog down the ECB.
He commands the respect of outside observers and fellow ­monetary Lagarde will also have to rely a lot more on the central bank’s staff,
policymakers, which has helped him push his preferred policies as she did during her time at the IMF. The question is w ­ hether in
through the central bank and convince investors they would be the event of a new crisis, she will be able to act with the c
­ reativity
­effective. He had little time for disagreement: In September, he and credibility of her predecessor.
chose to hammer through a package of rate cuts and asset ­purchases The ECB is a very different place from when Draghi joined
in spite of widespread opposition, including from the governors of in 2011. It would be foolish to imagine it will be the same when
the central banks of Germany, France, and the Netherlands. Lagarde leaves in 2027.

17
Global Outlook

The U.K. Economy’s Fate


Hangs on the Snap Election
By DAN HANSON

THE RESULT OF THE U.K. general election, due on Dec. 12, will have • Reflecting its lead in the polls, the Conservative Party wins
the biggest bearing on Britain’s economic outlook for 2020. We a small majority in the election on Dec. 12.
expect the vote to return a mandate for Prime Minister Boris • The U.K. leaves the EU based on the terms agreed to by
Johnson to deliver his Brexit deal. But we recognize the outcome Johnson. We’d previously assumed he would end up taking the
is highly uncertain and could result in a Labour-led government or country out of the EU without a deal at the start of 2020. We now
a hung Parliament. Our central forecast for 2020 sees a rebound think that’s unlikely.
in growth, below-target inflation, and higher interest rates. • The government indicates it’s willing to extend the t­ ransition
The U.K. economy has taken a battering in 2019. The main period to complete negotiations for a free-trade agreement with
culprit: unrelenting uncertainty created by Brexit. A slowing global the EU. Failing to do so would see Britain trading on terms set by
economy has also taken its toll. Quarterly growth has been ­volatile— the World Trade Organization at the start of 2021, while uncertainty
gross domestic product surged in the first quarter as companies persists during 2020.
stockpiled, and then dropped back in the second quarter. On an
underlying basis, it’s probably rising at a quarterly pace of 0.2%, Our Base Case: Johnson Wins, Plus a Brexit Deal
about half the average since the 2016 referendum. Still, the Under a new Johnson-led government, GDP growth will probably
economy looks like it will easily avoid a technical recession. pick up from the subdued underlying pace seen in 2019. Capital
Forecasting the economy beyond the third quarter requires spending is likely to return to growth, though the bounce will be
looking at how the Brexit saga will unfold. Since our last forecasts limited by uncertainty about the nature of the future relationship
were published, there’ve been three key developments. with the EU. The weaker global economic backdrop should also
First, Johnson secured a revised Brexit deal that appears to have mean net trade drags.
the broad support of the Conservative Party. Second, the U.K. asked Consumer spending, the heartbeat of the economy since
for a Brexit extension to Jan. 31, which the European Union granted. the 2016 referendum, is likely to get a lift from the boost to real
Third, Parliament voted in favor of holding an early general election. incomes from the rise in sterling. We expect this windfall to be
For the purposes of our latest central forecast, we’ve spent rather than saved, as it has been in the past.
assumed that: Looser fiscal policy will probably also support private
­domestic demand. Chancellor of the Exchequer Sajid Javid has
hinted that he might accelerate investment spending, and the
Conservatives Lead in the Polls pledges Johnson made on tax cuts during his leadership campaign
may also be honored. We’ve assumed a fiscal loosening of about
1% of GDP next year.
Average support among last five polls
Conservatives Labour Liberal Democrats Brexit Party
The Bank of England Is in No Rush
Under this scenario, which is our base case, the next move in
40% interest rates would be higher. That said, we doubt the Bank of
England’s Monetary Policy Committee would be in any rush to
tighten, particularly if the world economy still looks fragile. The
near-term outlook for inflation might also buy the committee
20 time—we expect price gains to remain below 2% through 2020.
The MPC has recently raised concerns that uncertainty
about the U.K.’s future relationship with the EU could become
1/1/19 10/25/19 0 entrenched and prevent growth from accelerating in 2020. Our
view is that domestic demand will gather enough momentum to
Sources: Britain Elects, Bloomberg Economics
erode the small margin of spare capacity that exists in the economy.
Given that the MPC will want to see evidence of a rebound under

18 SPECIAL REPO RT • B LO O M B ERG ECO N O M ICS


Global Outlook

way, we don’t expect a move until the end of next year. time. The economy will probably be about 5% smaller under John-
Looking beyond the election and Brexit, the other big son’s agreement after 10 years, compared with a world where the
­unanswered question for U.K. monetary policy is who will be the U.K. chooses to remain part of the EU.
next governor of the Bank of England? Mark Carney’s term is due
to finish at the end of January, though with an election ahead, it’s Recognizing Uncertainty
possible it will be extended again. It’s far from clear who will replace Elections in the U.K. have become increasingly hard to predict,
him, but if the appointment comes from inside the BOE, we and it’s quite possible that the vote goes another way. We sketch
wouldn’t expect a material shake-up in policy. a few possibilities below.
• A Labour-led coalition and second referendum. If the oppo-
Johnson’s Deal Is Worse Than May’s sition Labour Party won the most seats, it could manage to form
Beyond 2020, Johnson’s deal implies a harder Brexit than the one a coalition government with the Scottish National Party and
with the EU agreed to by his predecessor Theresa May. That ­possibly the Liberal Democrats, who would probably vote on policy
­featured a shared customs territory between the U.K. and EU with on a case-by-case basis.
close regulatory alignment. Moving away from that model is likely Such an outcome would take the prospect of a no-deal Brexit
off the table entirely and put a referendum in play. We would expect
many of the Labour Party’s more radical policies to get parked
How Four Different Brexit Outcomes Could Affect Growth under a coalition. But there still may be some uncertainty in finan-
cial markets about the domestic policy agenda.
On balance, we would expect sterling to rise on the prospect
Level of GDP (index, Q1 ’19 = 100)
of a more market-friendly Brexit outcome. The lift to real incomes
Remain after second referendum Customs Union after second referendum
Johnson’s deal after extension No-deal at the end of 2020
is likely to dominate any tax increase on high earners because they
have a relatively low propensity to consume. This should boost
108
consumption.
The possibility of a Remain vote or softer Brexit would
prompt a pickup in business investment. A recovery in capital
spending would probably come alongside higher public investment.
104 Longer term, private investment would be lower: Labour Party
leader Jeremy Corbyn wants to raise the corporation tax rate to
26%, dealing a blow to profits.
Q1 ’19 Q4 ’23 100
Overall, under this scenario we would expect growth to be a
little faster and inflation lower in 2020 relative to a C
­ onservative-led
Sources: Office for National Statistics, Bloomberg Economics
government. Interest rates would increase, too.
• A hung Parliament, and the torment continues. In this s­ cenario,
the election returns a hung Parliament with no combination of parties
to introduce more customs costs and nontariff barriers for able to form a stable working majority. If that happens, the U.K. is
­companies. likely to remain in limbo—unable to move forward with Brexit and
Overall, our modeling suggests Johnson’s agreement is con- relying on the goodwill of the EU to grant repeated extensions.
sistent with U.K. trend growth of a little less than 1.5%. That com- Underlying growth would probably remain anemic, at a quar-
pares with about 1.6% if the U.K. were in a customs union with the terly pace of 0.2%-0.3%, as the economy suffers under the weight
EU and 1.7% under May’s deal. At the extreme ends of the spec- of entrenched uncertainty. The BOE’s Monetary Policy Committee
trum, a no-deal Brexit would see trend growth of 1.2%, while in warned about such a scenario in the minutes of its September
the case of Remain, we would expect gains of 1.9%. meeting. We would expect the committee to respond by cutting
Those differences may sound small, but they add up over rates, probably as early as the second quarter of 2020.

19
Europe
and the
Middle East
Europe

Trouble Ahead for Germany


As It Skirts Recession
By JAMIE RUSH

GROWTH HAS SLUMPED IN GERMANY, reflecting a turn in the global down from 4.4% in the fourth quarter of 2017. Will that turn around
investment cycle, uncertainty over global trade, and turmoil in the anytime soon? Almost certainly not. Until global trade policy is
auto industry. Leading indicators suggest 2020 will begin on a more predictable, business sentiment will remain weak and
weak footing, and the risk is that a brief dip becomes a deeper ­investment spending will be held back.
downturn. One trigger: a potential breakdown in U.S.-European On top of all this, structural issues, such as the shift away
Union trade negotiations, leading to fresh tariffs. from diesel cars after the Volkswagen emissions scandal, affect
Once a source of strength, industry has become a Germany more than its peers in the euro area. The introduction
­vulnerability in Germany. It accounts for a bigger share of the of new emissions tests caused huge disruption to auto production
economy than in most countries and has shrunk by almost 7% in Germany. There may be a little more to come as new standards
since ­reaching a peak in 2017. Much of the decline is in interme- are implemented in ­stages; the second phase of Real Driving Emis-
diate and capital goods—those product categories typically sions rules will go into effect at the start of 2020.
­exported to trading partners around the world. We can trace the Put weakness in trade, investment, and autos together, and
sources of the production weakness to the decline in exports, it’s no surprise growth is extremely weak in Germany and set to stay
which is of a similar composition. that way. The indicators that we think give the best read on underly-
ing momentum show the malaise is spreading to the services sector,
and the slowdown will continue not only in the fourth quarter but also
China Isn’t the Only Problem into early 2020. Whether a technical recession is recorded in the near
term is of little significance—they’re fairly common in Germany. The
question is whether the recession deepens and lengthens.
Year-over-year change in German exports, 3-month moving average
The big risk is tariffs. Time is running out for progress on a
Total Euro area (percentage-point contribution) Non-euro area
U.S.-EU trade deal. If talks fail, there’s a chance EU autos will be hit
9% with hefty tariffs. About 1% of German economic activity is embed-
ded in autos and parts destined for the U.S., and the indirect impact
6 of tariffs on growth through a loss of confidence would be significant.
The U.S. has pulled back from the brink with China, possibly
3 suggesting that slower growth has made the administration less
likely to open up a new front in the trade war. Still, President Trump
0 has said the EU is worse than China when it comes to trade. A
long-­running dispute between Boeing Co. and Airbus SE is also in
1/2014 9/2019 -3 the mix, meaning goodwill is in short supply.
Our forecast is for gross domestic product growth of 0.5%
Source: German Federal Statistical Office in 2019 and just 0.4% in 2020. Against that backdrop, it’s h ­ ardly
­surprising that former European Central Bank President Mario
Draghi called on countries with fiscal space to spend more, and
Year-over-year export growth has plunged by about 8 per- ­Germany is likely to see its budget surplus shrink in the next year
centage points since the end of 2017. It’s easy to blame China’s or so. Still, Berlin has so far r­ esisted calls for more action, even as
slowing economy for Germany’s weakness, but that’s only part its northern neighbors have loosened their purse strings.
of the story. As the chart above shows, euro area trading partners We don’t expect Berlin’s attitude to fiscal policy to change
are as much to blame as those outside the c ­ urrency bloc. And in the near term. It would take more than a shallow downturn to
within that, a little more than 1 percentage point of the decline is shift the political calculus in favor of a major stimulus package.
directly accounted for by weaker trade with China. The slowdown The risk is that Germany’s economy just bumps along the bottom
in trade is global. for an ­extended period and the government fails to act, leaving
One of the main r­ easons for the trade slowdown: ebbing Chancellor Angela Merkel’s successor to deal with the electoral
global investment. In the second quarter of 2019, business invest- consequences. Solid growth has helped keep populism at bay in
ment by Group of Seven countries was growing 1.5% year on year, the euro area’s biggest economy, but that could change.

21
Europe

France’s Steady Pace


Is at Risk From Trade Threats
By MAEVA COUSIN

IN 2019 THE FRENCH ECONOMY has weathered the global slowdown hold disposable income. And the government has confirmed in its
and violent civil unrest. Activity should remain resilient in 2020—we 2020 budget its intention to keep support for households in place.
forecast growth of 1.4% year-on-year, up from 1.3% in 2019—but So far, consumers have remained cautious, and the fiscal give-
challenges are building. Escalation of trade tensions with the U.S. and aways have been banked rather than spent. This has boosted the
a disorderly Brexit represent large downside risks. Even so, we doubt household savings rate to 14.9%—well above the average of the last
these shocks will be big enough to tip the economy into recession. four years—providing a buffer for households to maintain consump-
As Germany has succumbed to the impact of the global tion in the face of adverse shocks to income. Consumer confidence
trade slowdown, France has held up pretty well. That’s because is strong, and we expect French households to lower their savings
the economy is much more sheltered than its euro area peers rate to maintain spending, even if trade uncertainty stays elevated.
from the effects of the cyclical swings in external demand. Exports Still, external threats loom large. Trade tensions with the U.S.
make up less than a third of gross domestic product, and a lot of are mounting, as the recent spat over Airbus subsidies illustrates.
these are essential goods, such as food and pharmaceuticals. France is the main contributor to European Union exports of transport
equipment to the U.S., and Washington’s retaliatory tariffs on EU
Confident—and Cautious—Consumers aircraft makers will hurt. Pressure on the bloc in trade negotiations
This resilience is visible in the data—the recent drop in global trade to open up its agricultural markets to grown-in-­America products
has prompted slower export growth, but it’s still positive. ­Looking could deliver a bigger blow. With 2.1% of French activity embedded
ahead, with France’s main export markets struggling, external in EU exports to the U.K., a disorderly Brexit would also cause harm.
demand will likely weigh on growth in the next few quarters. The key risk is that one or more of these shocks affect b
­ usiness
Domestic spending should hold up and help offset the weak- and consumer sentiment, with weakness spreading from external
ness in trade. Government handouts at the end of 2018 in the wake to domestic demand. Indeed, Bloomberg Economics’ recession
of the yellow vest protests have provided a welcome boost to house- probability models show the dangers are getting bigger for France.
Our central forecast is for the economy to remain resilient, supported
by consumer spending and the government’s readiness to provide
Limited Exposure to Cyclical Swings in Trade some support if needed. But fiscal space is limited, and risks are
clearly tilted to the downside.
Exports as a share of 2018 GDP
Food, beverages, and pharmaceuticals Other

Export Performance to Start Weighing on Growth


Luxembourg 225%
Malta 145 French GDP growth, quarter-over-quarter
Ireland 122
97 Percentage-point contribution:
Slovakia
Belgium 88 Household consumption Government consumption
Slovenia 85 Gross fixed capital formation Exports Imports Inventories
Netherlands 84
Lithuania 82
Estonia 75
Cyprus 64 1.0%
Latvia 59
Austria 55
Germany 47 0.5
Portugal 44
Finland 39
Greece 36 0
Spain 34
Italy 32
France 31 Q2 ’18 Q3 ’19 - 0.5

Sources: Eurostat, Bloomberg Economics Sources: Eurostat, Bloomberg Economics

22 SPECIAL REPO RT • B LO O M B ERG ECO N O M ICS


Europe

Italy: A New Start, the Same Woes—


Slow Growth and High Debt
By DAVID POWELL

BRUSSELS AND ROME are making up after a long budget bust-up. On balance, we expect the economy to eke out a small
That’s done a lot to ease tensions in financial markets. If the amount of growth in the fourth quarter, expanding by only 0.1%.
­rapprochement lasts, the Italian economy should grow. The risk That’s an improvement on the contractions last year, but still very
is that Italy’s ruling coalition collapses and a resurgent Matteo weak. Domestic political discord may have ­faded, but ­uncertainty
Salvini, head of the League, returns to power. If that happens, is here to stay—President Trump has repeatedly threatened to
rocketing yields and evaporating confidence would once again slap tariffs on the EU before the end of the year. That’s one reason
derail the country’s recovery from the euro crisis. we look for the expansion to be lackluster in 2020 as well.
We forecast Italian gross domestic product will expand by
only 0.1% in the fourth quarter of 2019. The rate of expansion Heavy Baggage
should accelerate to a still-meager 0.2% in 2020. Sluggish growth Italy’s problems started long before populist governments came
will leave Italy with an output gap of about 1.5% of potential GDP to power in Rome and Washington. The country never fully recov-
at the end of 2019. Weak underlying inflation is a reflection of this ered from the disastrous euro crisis. Its output gap widened to
sizable spare capacity. 5.1% in the second quarter of 2014 and has narrowed only to 1.6%.
That’s larger than any other of the monetary union’s four largest
A Fragile Peace economies. We think the output gap is significantly wider than the
Two disparate political parties—the Democratic Party and Five European Commission does.
Star Movement—have put aside their differences and formed a
government with Giuseppe Conte returning as prime minister. But
those differences are significant, and the only glue holding the Italy Is Still Plagued by Spare Capacity
coalition together is a mutual dislike of the League and Salvini.
Euro area output gap as a percentage of potential GDP
That isn’t a solid foundation.
Percentage-point contribution:
The alliance will be especially tried when it has to make the
Germany France Italy Spain Rest of euro area
numbers for next year’s budget add up. Italy still needs to find about
€24 billion in savings to repeal the hike in value-added tax that’s
­already been legislated. That’s about 1.4% of GDP. The ­debate ahead 1%
of the budget being finalized will be contentious, and neither coalition
partner will want to be seen as the instigator of more austerity.
0
Salvini is no longer occupying the corridors of power but
remains popular with the electorate. Recent opinion polls still give
his party about a 10-percentage-point lead over its closest rivals. -1
The League would be well-positioned to fight a general election if
the government were to collapse in acrimony. Q1 ’11 Q2 ’19 -2

Source: Bloomberg Economics


Draghi’s Parting Gift
Expectations for additional monetary easing from the European
Central Bank have helped grease the wheels of the economy. The
10-year government bond yield for Italy has declined by more than With its weak recovery, Italy is a significant drag on inflation
150 basis points since former ECB President Mario Draghi began for the euro area as a whole. We forecast core prices to rise by
to hint at his press conference in June that a major monetary only 0.7% in the country in 2019. That’s well below the 1.2% we
stimulus package would soon be announced. look for in Germany and 1.1% in Spain, though above the 0.6% we
The recent soft data point to some improvement. The quar- expect in France. Persistent slack will cause inflation to accelerate
terly average of the composite purchasing managers’ index survey only slowly in years to come.
has recovered from the trough of 49.5 posted at the end of 2018. Weak productivity growth and an aging population mean we
The European Commission’s Economic Sentiment Indicator for don’t expect the economy to materially outgrow its debt in years
Italy may have bottomed out as well. However, the hard data pro- to come. As a result, Italy is likely to hobble from one crisis to the
vide less reason for cheer—industrial output continues to decline. next for the foreseeable future.

23
Europe

Spain’s Economy Has Less Momentum


Going Into the Next Hill
By MAEVA COUSIN

SPAIN’S ECONOMY IS COOLING rapidly. Job creation has slowed, tourist to some extent agriculture and food manufacturing, could have a lot
numbers are stalling, and the global economy is faltering. In addition, to lose, especially from Brexit.
political uncertainty is on the rise again. With weaker growth pros- Spain is likely to face several significant external challenges
pects, there’s a risk this could have a bigger impact on consumers’ going into next year, with the labor market already showing signs
and businesses’ willingness to spend than in recent years. We f­ orecast of running out of steam. Deteriorating ­consumer sentiment, given
growth will slow to 1.5% in 2020, but see little risk of recession. the very low household savings rate, could q ­ uickly lead consumers
Spain’s economy has cooled faster than previously thought. to scale back their spending.
Revised data show it’s expanded at an average quarterly rate of
0.5% since 2018. That’s down from 0.8% in 2017 and lower than
the 0.6% previously reported. The downgrade reflects less Slower Job Creation to Weigh on Sentiment
­domestic demand—both household consumption and gross fixed
Spain indicators
capital formation. The historical data series for unemployment
Consumer confidence balance in percentage points (left axis)
has also been revised higher by the statistics office. Employment, quarter-over-quarter change (right axis)
This underscores evidence of an economy well into a new phase
of slower expansion. This was always to be expected after the stellar 0 2%
rate of growth from 2014-17 fueled by a r­ eturning workforce left idle
by the euro crisis. But this newfound slowdown means the economy
faces the next set of challenges with less momentum than we pre- -15 0
viously anticipated. And these challenges are getting bigger as ­external
headwinds intensify.
-30 -2
Spain has a relatively closed economy, with exports making
up only about a third of gross domestic product, compared with
an average of 50% for its euro area peers. This should make its - 45 Q1 ’93 Q2 ’19 -4
economy relatively sheltered from cyclical swings in external
­d emand, but it also relies heavily on one particularly cyclical Sources: European Commission, Eurostat, Bloomberg Economics

­industry—tourism. In 2017 the tourist industry represented almost


12% of all economic activity, evenly distributed between spending
by Spaniards on staycations and foreign visitors. Meanwhile, political risk is building at home. Spain’s fourth
Tourism, particularly from overseas, made a strong positive election in as many years on Nov. 10 left parliament even more
contribution to GDP growth from 2014-17, as visitors headed for the fractured, which is likely to result in the same political stalemate.
beach again after several lean years during the euro crisis. The terror A Supreme Court decision in October to imprison a group of Cat-
attacks in Tunisia in 2015 also diverted holidaymakers from North alan separatist leaders prompted a wave of protests in the region
African destinations. But tourist numbers stopped rising in 2018 and and could turn the Catalonia issue into a national crisis again.
2019, and other sectors have failed to offset this impact on growth. Catalonia is the largest economic region in Spain, accounting
Spain’s tourist industry is likely to face further pressure. for about a fifth of the total value of the country’s output and capital
With growth slowing in the U.K. and Germany, the outlook for the formation. Concerns about its future could prompt businesses to
sector looks less rosy. The sharp depreciation of sterling also isn’t postpone local investment, denting Spain’s overall performance when
helping. Higher labor costs following an i­ ncreased national minimum companies are already growing cautious about investment decisions.
wage could make the sector less competitive at a time when some The economy has shown itself equal to the task of shrugging
North African destinations are regaining holidaymakers’ trust. off political instability in recent years. But that was when growth
Beyond tourism, other external threats loom for Spain’s was strong, making it easier to dismiss political skirmishes as a
­exporters. Fortunately, the country is less exposed than many of its sideshow to the recovery. With job creation slowing, external threats
euro area peers to the risk of a disorderly Brexit and U.S. tariffs on building, and the chance of another Catalonia crisis flaring up again,
Europe. But some sectors, notably the textile and car industries, and things might be different this time around.

24 SPECIAL REPO RT • B LO O M B ERG ECO N O M ICS


Europe

Freezing Sweden’s Rates At Zero


By JOHANNA JEANSSON

GROWTH IN SWEDEN ALMOST ground to a halt in the first half of 2019, of Sweden’s workers striking deals, 2020 will be a bumper year
and the weakness is here to stay. Global headwinds are blowing for pay negotiations. Modest wage hikes could help ­cushion the
strong, and the cooler housing market will continue to act as a impact on employment from faster deterioration in the economy.
drag on the economy. As a result, the Riksbank rate is frozen at The flip side for the Riksbank is that continuously weak wage
zero for a couple of years. growth will make it even more difficult for the bank to achieve its
In early 2019, it almost looked like Sweden’s highly export-­ 2% inflation target.
oriented economy could ride out the global trade war and ­Brexit
uncertainty. In the third quarter, however, incoming data wors- Inflation Is Slowing
ened quickly. Indicators such as the purchasing managers’ index Inflation has already slowed in 2019 after hitting a 20-year high of
pointed to shrinking production, and unemployment seems to 2.5% in September 2018. As in Sweden’s main export markets
be edging up. such as Germany, the cheaper cost of energy is the main reason.
Exports of goods and services make up almost half the Excluding energy, price pressures are also weaker than a
­Nordic region’s biggest economy, and this makes Sweden highly year earlier. The krona’s decline has failed to lift import prices
sensitive to a slowdown in the rest of the world. Our own forecasts enough to reach the inflation target, and service price inflation
show gross domestic product growth among Sweden’s top five remains modest. Add the lackluster outlook for global growth, and
trading partners as likely to fall to 1.4% in 2020, from 2.7% in 2017. it’s clear inflation pressures will remain muted. We see headline
This largely reflects the slowdown in Germany, where our forecast and core inflation at a mere 1.5% in 2020.
is below consensus. Swedish households also expect the economy to slow.
­Consumer confidence has fallen since the end of 2017 to below
its long-term average. The effect on households from the slack-
Darker Outlook for Exports ening labor market will be only partly offset by a somewhat more
­expansionary fiscal policy in 2020. We don’t ­expect the latest
Sweden indicators
budget moves to be enough for consumption to lift growth
Exports, year-over-year change (left axis)
Trade-weighted change in trade partner GDP (right axis) BE forecast (right axis) ­substantially in the near term.

15% 3% Trade Wars and Brexit


For 2020 as a whole, we forecast economic growth of below 1%,
down from 1.2% in 2019. As 2021 approaches, growth should pick
10 2 up in tandem with a cyclical upturn in the euro zone.
To be sure, a U.S.-China mini deal, Brexit deal, and weaker
­krona may help Sweden steer clear of the worst shocks from ­global
5 1
trade tensions and pull the economy back on track more quickly.
Since the end of 2016, following the Riksbank’s decision to
0 Q1 ’10 Q4 ’20 0 cut the benchmark rate to -0.5% in February that year, the trade-­
weighted krona has weakened more than 10%. But there’s mixed
Sources: Statistics Sweden, Bloomberg Economics evidence on the benefit of such a depreciation, given that global
value chains mean most exporters also face rising import costs
when the krona slumps.
The Housing Market Cools Riksbank Governor Stefan Ingves, who steered the economy
Domestic factors are also set to contribute, as an earlier boost to through the 2008 financial crisis, presided over an increase in the
growth from housing has turned into a drag. This comes amid an central bank’s main repo rate to -0.25% in December 2018. The bank
­increase in supply coupled with macro-prudential measures imposed had aimed to hike rates further toward the end of 2019 and in 2020.
by Sweden’s financial supervisory authority. Housing investment But with sputtering growth in Sweden’s main export markets,
eased in 2018, after rising more than 70% from 2012-17, and has kept uncertainty about global investment demand, and more cautious
declining this year. The weakness is likely to persist for some time household spending, we don’t expect this to happen. The central
before stabilizing in line with early indicators such as housing starts. bank recently repeated its stated aim of raising rates to zero. But
The slowdown means unemployment is likely to climb fur- after that, like the Riksbank, we expect them to stay on hold until
ther, keeping a lid on wages at a crucial time. With more than half the skies clear.

25
Europe

Slow Growth, Unrest in Russia


Could Test Putin’s Long Game
By SCOTT JOHNSON

RUSSIA’S ECONOMY SHOULD GATHER some momentum going into using the policy space provided by a sharper-than-expected slow-
2020, but growth will remain frustratingly slow. For now, President down in inflation. While the Kremlin will welcome the extra kick
Vladimir Putin has only mild stimulus on order. He’s focused on for growth, it can’t rely on the central bank for stimulus.
bolstering the country’s long-run security, rather than delivering a We see the easing cycle stopping with the key rate at 6%, still
fleeting boost. That could change if external demand softens further within the 6%-7% range considered neutral. Policymakers will be
or slow growth stokes domestic unrest. reluctant to go much further, especially with price pressure likely to
For Russia, now is an especially inopportune time for global reemerge as the government loosens its belt.
growth to slow. The economy is still shaking off the effects of January’s Putin hasn’t stayed entirely true to his fiscal framework. He’s
increase in value-added tax, which pushed up prices and squeezed left the option of investing a portion of the country’s ­energy savings
consumers. The government only r­ ecently launched an ambitious into high-quality projects at home—a potential source of off-budget
multiyear drive to boost investment and exports. stimulus. But we expect the Finance Ministry to avoid weakening its
The latest data show lingering weakness in domestic s­ pending, fiscal rule significantly, which means the sums will be small.
reflecting stagnating incomes. External demand is also flagging, a What might force a change of plans? Keep an eye on the streets.
worrying sign. But these obstacles don’t appear strong enough to The next major election isn’t until 2021, but the public could lose
prevent a recovery from the sharp slowdown earlier in the year. Mild patience with slow-and-steady investments—health care and
stimulus from looser fiscal and monetary policy should give some ­education are particular pinch points. Protests this year ahead of
extra lift. We see the expansion gradually gathering pace each quar- municipal elections caught the Kremlin off guard. Plodding growth
ter, with annual growth reaching 2% in 2020, up from 1.1% in 2019. could itself become a security risk.
More immediately, a darkening global outlook might also require
Exports Are Shrinking the Kremlin to rethink its strategy. Exports account for more than a
Further ahead, though, peak speed won’t get much faster. That’s quarter of Russia’s GDP, and they’ve been contracting. The stimulus
a problem for Putin. He’s pledged to push growth sustainably above penciled in so far may not be enough to offset a steeper slide.
3%, and getting back to 2% will only soften the disappointment. The In our view, Putin would accept a shortfall against his growth
government’s development agenda looks promising, but it’s heavy targets if he can at least show signs of improvement. That would
on infrastructure investments and ­productivity-boosting measures, be better than returning the economy to a more volatile long-run
which will take years to bear fruit. course. But he’s unlikely to tolerate a deep downturn when there’s
Mild stimulus isn’t enough to bridge the gap, but so far the cash to spare and room to cut rates.
Kremlin shows little inclination to do more. Indeed, it probably can’t
without reneging on commitments to maintain price stability, wean
the economy off oil and gas, and build up financial buffers. These are Russia’s Unspent Windfall
top priorities for Putin in his drive to secure Russia against crisis at
Russian oil and gas revenue diverted to reserves
home and political pressure abroad.
The Finance Ministry has penciled in $17 billion in extra BE forecast
­spending for 2020-21. Yet relative to earlier plans, that may add $60b
only 0.1 percentage point to 0.3 percentage point to GDP growth
in 2020, and not much in future years. It’s also being paid for with
a windfall in nonenergy tax revenue. A fiscal rule will still channel As a
share of
$45 billion in oil and gas proceeds into reserves in 2019 and almost GDP 30
1.8%
$40 billion a year going forward.
Putin could hit his growth targets by tapping the government’s
0.9%
energy savings to bankroll further stimulus. But that would only
provide a temporary boost, and at the cost of long-run stability, 2017 2022 0
deepening the economy’s dependence on hydrocarbons.
The Bank of Russia is acting more decisively. The central Sources: Russian Ministry of Finance, Bloomberg Economics

bank has cut interest rates by 125 bps since June, but it’s only

26 SPECIAL REPO RT • B LO O M B ERG ECO N O M ICS


Europe

Turkey’s Finally Out of Recession,


But Not Yet in the Clear
By ZIAD DAOUD

THE WORST IS PROBABLY OVER for Turkey’s economy—it’s out of Another risk is the possibility of penalties from the E ­ uropean
recession, inflation is falling, and the current-account deficit has Union—Turkey’s larger trading partner. The EU has already
narrowed dramatically. But unpredictable policy, geopolitics, and ­restricted military exports to Turkey. Volkswagen AG has decided
global sentiment could quickly undo that progress. to delay building a car plant in the country. President Recep T ­ ayyip
Greater currency stability, monetary easing, and credit Erdogan has threatened to send millions of Syrian refugees into
growth should drive economic expansion of 2.5% in 2020, up from Europe if the EU doesn’t stop criticizing his military operation.
zero this year. 3) Global sentiment: Turkey was a victim of the negative
But Turkey still faces domestic, regional, and global risks. The sentiment against emerging markets in 2018. But it has benefited
strength of its fiscal position could be a useful buffer in a downturn. from monetary easing among the world’s major central banks this
Turkey has staged a recovery from the currency crisis of year. This explains why investors hardly punished the lira after Erdogan
2018. After a short recession in the second half of that year, it’s unexpectedly sacked the central bank governor in July or when the
growing again. Growth was initially aided by fiscal stimulus and central bank unveiled deeper-than-expected rate cuts in July,
credit expansion, but the partial withdrawal of these measures September, and October.
hasn’t sent the economy back into recession. But sentiment can turn quickly. After all, easier global mon-
The current account has seen a remarkable adjustment, etary policy is a response to a slowing world economy. If the slow-
going from a significant deficit of almost 6% of gross domestic down turns from mild to severe, the relentless search for yield
product in 2017 to a surplus. This was due partly to slow ­economic could turn into a flight to safety out of Turkey.
growth, which depressed imports, but also reflected the impact
of lira depreciation. Fiscal War Chest
An improved current-account balance has reduced external What tools do policymakers have to tackle a new downturn? The
vulnerability and helped stabilize the currency. This in turn has bedrock of Turkey’s economy is the government’s balance sheet.
driven a deceleration in inflation and allowed the central bank to Public debt was relatively low at 29% of GDP in 2018, giving the
cut interest rates aggressively. The benchmark rate has been authorities room to act in the event of a downturn.
slashed by 1,000 basis points so far this year. The government has announced a growth target of 5% in
The government is targeting 5% growth next year and is 2020. If it seeks to engineer a credit boom to achieve this, then
expected to throw the stimulus kitchen sink at the economy. We the economy and the currency may face another bout of instabil-
think its efforts will probably lift growth to 2.5%. Improved growth ity. And that fiscal space may well be needed.
and a relatively benign global environment should stabilize the lira,
allowing inflation and interest rates to fall further.
Still, Turkey’s recent history suggests there will be risks and Inflation Slowed, Current-Account Deficit Closed
surprises around our baseline scenario. Three of these risks are
Turkey indicators
particularly prominent:
Current-account balance (left axis)
1) Policy error: Dissatisfied with what might be perceived Consumer price index, year-over-year change (right axis)
as slow growth, authorities in Turkey have repeatedly tried to
generate unsustainable booms. To this end, from 2012 to 2018 $3b 28%
they kept interest rates too low for too long, engineered a sizable
credit boom, and capped deposit rates at banks. This has invariably 0 21
backfired, leaving the currency to pay the price.
2) Geopolitics: Tensions between Turkey and the U.S. took -3 14
their toll on the lira in the summer of 2018 and the spring of 2019.
Turkey’s military incursion in Syria threatened to bring this risk -6 7
back to the fore, though this threat has now been largely allayed.
The risk for Turkey is if the U.S. imposes sanctions on the coun- -9 1/2017 8/2019 0
try’s financial institutions. Turkish banks need $60 billion of foreign
currency financing in the next 12 months, according to Bloomberg Sources: Central Bank of Turkey, TurkStat

Intelligence. Sanctions would make securing this funding hard.

27
Middle East

Black Swans, Oil Bears—Saudi Arabia


Faces a Menagerie of Risks
By ZIAD DAOUD

SAUDI ARABIA IS LIKELY TO SHOW little or no growth this year. Could negative, but it doesn’t reflect weaker economic activity. A similar
it tip into recession in 2020? We identify four potential triggers: technical recession occurred in 2017. We attach a subjective prob-
a deeper cut to output from the group of OPEC+ oil producers, ability of 20% to this possibility.
involuntary crude outages, fiscal retrenchment, and a geopolit- Second, an involuntary decline in oil output could occur
ical upset. ­because of delays in the repairs to reinstate production at the
We estimate the risk of recession at a relatively moderate kingdom’s main crude-processing plant after the Sept. 14 attacks.
40%. Saudi Arabia has less ammunition to tackle a downturn The official guidance is that full capacity will be restored before
today than five years ago, when oil prices were running above the end of the year, and the latest news is that Saudi Arabia is ahead
$100 a barrel. of schedule. Still, risks have increased, and we think there’s a small
Our base case is that growth will reach 1% in 2020, up from probability, about 5%, of the outage affecting next year’s output.
almost zero this year. Oil output should stabilize following a con- Third is fiscal consolidation—probably stemming from a fall
traction in 2019. Non-oil growth will ease slightly as monetary and in oil prices as global demand weakens or supply surges from either
fiscal stimulus diminish. Iran or the U.S. This would lead to a recession only if the government
sharply cut expenditures, reduced subsidies, or raised the con-
sumption tax. We estimate there’s a small chance, maybe about
More Debt, Lower Reserves 5%, of this occurring.
Saudi Arabia public debt as a share of GDP
Fourth are black swans in geopolitics. Recent history offers
20% some examples: an escalation of tensions with Iran or the war in
Yemen; another government-labeled “anti-corruption” campaign
$656b
that damages domestic sentiment; or attacks on economically
Forex reserve assets
important facilities in the kingdom. We attach a 10% probability
10 to this happening.

$496b Limited Recession-Fighting Tools


What’s certain is that if a recession occurs, the authorities have
2012 2018 0 less policy space today to address it than five years ago. Public
debt reached 19% of gross domestic product in 2018, compared
Sources: IMF, Saudi Arabian Monetary Authority with almost zero just four years earlier. Foreign exchange reserves
have declined by a third since their peak in 2014.
The kingdom also lacks monetary tools to engineer a
With such slow growth, we highlight four forces that could ­recovery. Monetary policy is neutral; the Saudi Arabian Monetary
tip the economy into recession. Not all downturns are equal—some Authority simply follows the U.S. Federal Reserve in its interest-rate
are technical; others are malicious. decisions. And the optimism generated by Saudi Arabia’s trans-
First, the most benign is a voluntary oil production cut as formation agenda has waned since the kingdom unveiled its
part of a wider OPEC+ agreement. This will make overall growth ­Vision 2030 plan almost four years ago.

28 SPECIAL REPO RT • B LO O M B ERG ECO N O M ICS


Middle East

The Oil Price Decline: 70% Trade War,


30% Supply Glut
By ZIAD DAOUD

BRENT CRUDE HAS FALLEN 21% since April. We estimate that weak growth will reach 2.2 million barrels per day (b/d), absorbing all
demand linked to the impact of the trade war accounts for 70% demand growth (1.2 million b/d), and then more. Excess supply
of the decline. Abundant supply is responsible for the rest. This will be 1 million b/d if OPEC sustains current production levels.
trend is likely to continue next year, posing a dilemma for the group The bearish outlook is shared by financial markets. The
of conventional oil producers known as OPEC+. ­average Brent crude oil price in 2020 forecast by markets is $57 per
Oil is down about $14 since peaking in April. Our model, barrel, down from an expected $63 this year.
which decomposes price movements into demand and supply
drivers, shows that $10 of the decline reflects weaker demand, A Dilemma for OPEC+
while $4 is due to excess supply. Oil markets are likely to remain The environment poses a question for conventional oil producers
oversupplied next year, forcing OPEC+ countries to choose in OPEC+: Should they deepen cuts in output beyond March to
­between lower prices or a shrinking market share. help balance the market? The short-term financial needs of the
members may prompt them to do just that.
But this strategy hasn’t quite worked since it was introduced
Drivers of Oil Prices in late 2016. The short-term price boost gave high-cost shale
producers a lifeline to pump more, subsequently suppressing oil
Change in oil price per barrel since April 24, 2019
prices. OPEC producers sell oil at a similar price today as they did
Change due to supply Change due to demand
in early 2017, but now they have a lower market share. Looser
$0 compliance with production quotas among members may also
undermine any deepening of cuts.

 ethodology: Attributing Shocks


M
To Demand, Supply Factors
Start of
-10 To attribute crude price movement to demand and supply compo-
U.S. tariffs
on Chinese nents, we assume: strong demand lifts oil and equity prices; supply
imports More tariffs on
Chinese tariffs Chinese imports Aramco
disruption raises oil prices but lowers nonenergy equities; and in any
on U.S. goods Yuan sliding past 7 attacked 30-minute period, oil is affected by demand or supply, but not both.
4/24/19 10/14/19 -20

Source: Bloomberg Economics Impact of Different Shocks on Asset Prices

Effect of a shock
Leads to higher values Leads to lower values
The outlook for the global economy, and hence oil demand,
has been steadily deteriorating, taking a toll on oil prices. The
Oil Equities
­International Monetary Fund’s downgrade of its global growth
Higher demand + +
forecast is the latest example. Our model shows that the escala-
Lower supply + -
tion of the U.S.-China trade war, particularly in May and August,
was especially negative.
Source: Bloomberg Economics
The supply picture hasn’t been positive, either. OPEC+ might
have thought its agreement in December to extend production
cuts would have been enough to boost prices. But other parts of
the world, such as the U.S., have pumped more oil than expected, In terms of procedure, we split the trading day into ­30-minute
pushing crude prices lower. intervals. In each interval, if oil prices and nonenergy equities move
in the same direction, we attribute the change in oil price to
A Daunting Surplus ­demand. If they move in opposite directions, we attribute the
Ample oil supply and weak demand are likely to continue next year. change to supply. We treat the close-to-open period as one long
The International Energy Agency forecasts that non-OPEC supply interval and attribute the shocks as above.

29
Asia
Asia

Central Bank Easing and Tax Cuts


Will Spur a Recovery in India in 2020
By ABHISHEK GUPTA

INDIA’S RECOVERY, WHICH HAS BEEN a long time coming, finally seems ber for existing companies to 22%, from 30%, and for new manu-
to be around the corner. By next year, rural incomes should rise, the facturing companies to 15% from 25%. This is likely to boost private
central bank’s rate cuts are expected to lead to lower lending rates, investment and has the potential to attract greater foreign invest-
and post-tax corporate profits are likely to be higher. Combined, ment over the next few years—just as the U.S.-China trade war is
these should revive consumer and investor sentiment. prompting global manufacturers to rethink their supply chains.
The turnaround is likely to show up beginning in the
­October-December quarter, though largely because of a low base Weak Inflation to Allow More Room for RBI Easing
in the year-earlier period. A genuine recovery should start in 2020. Subdued consumer price inflation gives the RBI room for further
• We expect gross domestic product growth to rise sharply easing. Inflation jumped to 3.99% in September, from 3.28% in August,
in fiscal 2021 ending in March, to 7.1%, from an estimated 5.7% in but still undershot the RBI’s 4% target for a 14th straight month.
fiscal 2020. On a quarterly basis, we expect growth to remain flat • We expect average inflation to rise to 4.3% in the fiscal
at 5% in the second quarter of fiscal 2020 ending in September, third quarter of 2020, from 3.5% in the second quarter. Beyond
recover to 6% in the third quarter, and rise to 6.8% in the fourth that, inflation should drop to an average 3.8% in the fiscal fourth
quarter ending in March 2021. quarter of 2020 and 3.5% in the first quarter of 2021.
• Good rainfall and government income support is expected • Monsoon rains from June through September were 10%
to boost farmers’ income and drive rural consumption. The Reserve higher than their average historical levels. This bodes well for a
Bank of India’s liquidity support and rate cuts have started to bring bumper harvest this year and is expected to cool inflation in food
down borrowing rates for home loans and personal consumer loans. prices in the year ahead.
These should support overall consumption. • Core inflation (excluding gold prices) has continued to ease
• Deep cuts in corporate tax rates are also likely to add impetus since June 2018, reflecting weak consumer demand and a lack of
to the recovery, reviving animal spirits among businesses and share- retail pricing power. The downward trajectory in core inflation has
holders and, over the medium term, attracting more investment. helped counter some of the acceleration in food inflation since
• Several other factors also bode well for the outlook. The November 2018.
government’s decision to infuse capital into public-sector banks and • We expect core inflation to soften further because, among
the central bank’s measures to revive non-deposit-taking financial other factors, companies are expected to pass on the benefit of
companies should help strengthen the financial system. The RBI’s recent tax cuts to consumers. Also, we expect a lower tax on con-
transfer of surplus capital reserves to the government also creates sumer goods and services; a greater supply of affordable housing;
more leeway to increase fiscal spending. lower input costs for businesses because of declining gasoline prices;
The government lowered the corporate tax rate in Septem- and favorable base effects during the October to December period.

Closing the Output Gap With RBI Rate Cuts


Lower Corporate Taxes and RBI Cuts Under Governor Shaktikanta Das, the central bank has been
Will Aid a Sustained Recovery ­responding to a widening output gap and subdued inflation with
India GDP, year-over-year change accommodative policies since the start of this year.
Quarterly Annually • The bank has clarified multiple times that its topmost prior-
Bloomberg
10% ity is to close the negative output gap. Das also highlighted recently
Economics
forecast
that the monetary policy committee will continue its accommodative
stance as long as necessary to revive growth.
• The RBI delivered a 25-basis-point rate cut in October, for
7 a cumulative easing of 135 bps since February. We expect the bank
to reduce the policy rate further, to a terminal 4.5%, by March
2020, from 5.15% now.
• The RBI has sustained surplus liquidity conditions since June,
Q1 ’13 Q1 ’21 4 which has eased liquidity pressures within the financial system. This
has also helped lead to lower lending rates. We believe its recent
Sources: Bloomberg Economics, Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation push for banks to use the policy rate as a benchmark for lending
rates will improve the transmission of monetary easing.

31
Asia

The Trade War Will Continue


To Weigh on South Korea
By JUSTIN JIMENEZ

TRADE TENSIONS WILL CONTINUE to shape South Korea’s outlook in That trend of greater spending is expected to continue into
2020, with the export-oriented economy expected to face stiff 2020 with the government’s proposed budget of 513.5 trillion won
challenges. To support growth, the government has pledged an ($440 billion). If approved, that would be 9.3% higher than the
expansionary fiscal stance in 2020, proposing another record bud- 2019 main budget, broadly in line with this year’s 9.5% rise and
get. The Bank of Korea, which cut its policy rate by 50 basis points one of the largest increases since the global financial crisis. Even
this year, has kept the door open for easing. Despite the step up in so, the downward pressures on growth from continued trade
stimulus, policymakers will need to remain on the defensive given uncertainty mean more stimulus may be needed. It’s worth noting
heightened risks. that South Korea has a tendency to propose supplementary
• Our baseline forecast is for the economy to grow 2.3% in budgets when the economy loses steam, which it may do again
2020, as stimulus supports the economy and private investment next year.
starts to stabilize. That’s up from our expectation of a 1.9% rise in Indeed, the threats to the country’s economy remain. Global
2019. Barring an unexpected shock, the risk of recession remains growth will likely be tepid in 2020, especially among South Korea’s
relatively low. major trading partners. Even with a tentative trade truce between
• The government’s expansionary fiscal position should relieve China and the U.S., growth in China—the destination for about a
some of the burden on the Bank of Korea to support growth. With quarter of South Korea’s overseas sales—is expected to slow. If
the benchmark interest rate back at its record low of 1.25%, and hostilities with the U.S. resume, the Chinese economy would
policymakers concerned about financial imbalances, the hurdle for ­probably slide further.
any further easing will be high. The trade war’s hit to the global tech sector also means
Fiscal policy has played a key role in buttressing the South weaker demand for South Korean components of Chinese elec-
Korean economy so far in 2019. In particular, government spending tronics. Bloomberg Intelligence sees the pullback in tech sales
has bolstered the labor market, with jobs gains centered around the extending into 2020. Semiconductors account for about 20% of
public and social-service sectors. That’s helped offset a pullback in the country’s total exports and have been contracting since
private investment, which has slumped since the second quarter of December 2018.
2018 but should show signs of stabilizing in the year ahead—more Those problems are compounded by the uncertainty
because of technical reasons than renewed animal spirits. The man- ­surrounding Seoul’s trade dispute with Tokyo. South Korea’s high-
ufacturing sector has faced sustained job losses since April 2018. tech manufacturers are highly reliant on Japan for specialized
materials. Japan’s tighter regulations and its removal in August of
South Korea from its list of most-trusted trading partners threaten
Expansionary Fiscal Policy to Support Growth to disrupt tech supply chains and muddle investment plans. That
could hinder a potential rebound in Korea’s memory chip industry.
South Korea budget, in won Those risks suggest the central bank will need to remain on
Main Extra the defensive following its 50 bps of rate cuts this year. We think
the severity of trade tensions will play a defining role in whether it
10.6% change in main budget, year-over-year proceeds with more easing in 2020. Governor Lee Ju-yeol said the
500t bank has room for further action, but it must exercise caution in
9.3% cutting the policy rate below its effective lower bound—though he
didn’t specify what that level might be. Record-low inflation and
easing by the U.S. Federal Reserve give the BOK room to maneuver
250 if it needs to lower its benchmark rate further.
Even so, policymakers remain conscious of the impact of
lower rates on financial imbalances. Possibly reflecting those
concerns, two board members dissented in favor of a hold on rates
2009 2020* 0 at the October meeting. Another factor to consider in the year
*Government proposal
ahead: The terms of four of the BOK’s seven board members are
Sources: South Korea Finance Ministry, Bloomberg Economics, news reports up in April, and the new composition may affect the bank’s
policy preferences.

32 SPECIAL REPO RT • B LO O M B ERG ECO N O M ICS


Asia

When Will the Hong Kong


Recession End?
By QIAN WAN

HONG KONG’S ECONOMY HAS BEEN crippled by months of civil unrest, as well as the drag created by a broader China slowdown.
the U.S.-China trade war, and the global slowdown. The city is in The fourth quarter will likely be no better. Shops have been
recession, with a second straight quarter of contraction in the shutting down on weekends or closing earlier than usual. Service
third quarter, and a further slump expected in the fourth. The for the Mass Transit Railway has been disrupted. Both point to
outlook for 2020 isn’t much brighter, though growth could pick broader damage to the economy. Retail sales and visitor arrivals
up marginally off a low base this year. will probably register a double-digit decline.
Bloomberg Economics forecasts gross domestic product
will expand 0.5% in 2020, after a contraction of 1.3% a year earlier, China Slowdown Will Be a Drag to Recovery in 2020
which reversed a rise of 3% in 2018. Much hinges on how the pro- Even under our baseline scenario—with social unrest easing this
tests play out and whether the U.S. and China manage to dial down year and the U.S. refraining from further tariff hikes on ­China—we
the trade war. Either way, the impact of political unrest—initially are more pessimistic on the city’s 2020 growth outlook than the
sparked by ­concerns about Beijing’s encroachment on the city’s International Monetary Fund and the market consensus.
autonomy—will endure. The external environment will continue to work against the
Measures to support the economy—including long-term plans small, open economy. The city is a major channel for trade between
sketched out by Chief Executive Carrie Lam in an annual policy the U.S. and China. Bloomberg Economics expects China’s economy
to slow further to 5.7% in 2020—below the IMF’s 5.8% projection—
and projects the U.S. to slow to 2%. If the U.S. keeps 15%-25% tariffs
Fourth-Quarter Outlook Is Dimmed by Escalating Unrest on $360 billion of Chinese exports in place, weak external demand
will remain a heavy drag on growth.
Hong Kong indicators, year-over-year change
Even if unrest subsides by yearend, the impact on the
Actual Forecast
economy will linger. Concerns about further disruptions have put
Q1 ’19 Q2 ’19 Q3 ’19 Q4 ’19 2018 2019 2020 a damper on business investment. What’s more, anti-China
­sentiment in the city deters tourists to Hong Kong from the main-
BE baseline GDP scenario
Unrest calms in November 0.6 0.5 -2.9 -3.5 3.0 -1.3 0.5 land. The current protests have lasted longer, and have been more
violent, than the 2014 Occupy Central Movement. It’s worth noting
Additional GDP scenario
that after 2014 it took three years for mainland tourist numbers
Unrest continues and 0.6 0.5 -2.9 -4.0 3.0 -1.5 -0.5
intensifies into 2020 to fully recover.

Consumer price index 2.2 3.0 3.3 3.5 3.0 3.0 3.0 The Risks: Prolonged Trade War and Social Unrest
Source: Bloomberg Economics A further escalation in the trade war is a downside risk for Hong
Kong’s growth outlook. If the U.S. continues to hike tariffs on
­China’s exports, the city’s trade and logistics industry—which
address and two rounds of fiscal stimulus announced by Financial accounts for about 20% of GDP and employment—would suffer
Secretary Paul Chan—are insufficient to restore confidence. The a heavy blow.
short-term stimulus may relieve some pain for certain sectors, but Longer term, potential damage to the city’s reputation as an
it’s unlikely to significantly lift growth. open, stable financial hub is the bigger risk. This would deter
The economy contracted 2.9% in the third quarter from the ­investment in the city and could spur an exit of foreign companies,
period a year earlier, reflecting the compounding impact of undercutting the foundation of the banking and commercial hub.
the trade war on exports and social unrest on retail and tourism, Undoing that sort of damage would not be easy.

33
Asia

Trade Deal or Not, Asean


Economies Should Pick Up
By TAMARA HENDERSON

A SHARP SLOWDOWN IN Southeast Asia’s largest economies in 2019


should set the stage for a pickup in 2020. That’s when this year’s Growth May Partially Rebound
monetary easing should bear more visible fruit. Also, barring a GDP growth
further escalation in the U.S.-China trade war, export growth 2018 2019 forecast 2020 forecast
should look strong coming off of last year’s anemic levels. A full
rebound, though, might have to wait until 2021. Even with a trade
deal, investment may remain subdued until uncertainty about 6%

the U.S. presidential election clears in November.


• Growth in the first half of 2019 for the five largest economies
4
of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations—Indonesia, Malaysia,
the Philippines, Singapore, and Thailand—was the weakest half-year
performance since the global financial crisis. The outlook into 2
yearend and the first quarter of 2020 appears even worse, given
further increases in U.S. tariffs.
• Recession risk is significant for Singapore and Thailand, the Asean 5 Singapore Thailand Malaysia Indonesia Philippines 0

region’s more open economies. But the slump should be short-lived,


especially if authorities ramp up stimulus. Sources: National statistical agencies, Bloomberg Economics

• We expect Asean-5 growth to slow to 3.3% on average this


year, from 4.7% in 2018. A trade truce in 2020 could boost the expan-
sion to 3.9% next year. Asean Nations Could Attract More U.S. Tariffs
In the first half of 2019, growth from a year earlier in Southeast Malaysia, Singapore, and Vietnam were added to the U.S. Treasury’s
Asia’s five largest economies was just 3.7% on average, down from watchlist for currency manipulation in May. In July, the U.S. slapped
5.1% in the period a year earlier. The deceleration began after the U.S. tariffs of more than 400% on steel imports from Vietnam. It will sus-
slapped a 10% duty on $200 billion of its imports from China. pend some Thai trade preferences in the second quarter next year.
Those tariffs were subsequently hiked to 25% in May, and duties The Trump administration has also hinted at tariffs on coun-
were placed on additional consumer-oriented products in Septem- tries with undervalued currencies. Bloomberg Economics’ fair value
ber. This will weigh more heavily on the Asean-5 economies’ export estimates suggest the Malaysian ringgit and Indonesian rupiah are
growth, but only until midyear 2020 if no more duties are added. undervalued by 15% and 6%, respectively. Tariff risk is more sig-
Ongoing U.S. tariff uncertainty could conceivably continue to nificant for Malaysia and Vietnam because they have sizable trade
subdue investment throughout 2020. Asean-5 investment in the surpluses with the U.S.
second quarter fell 0.2% from the quarter a year earlier. An escala- The ability to underpin domestic demand with joint fiscal and
tion in the trade war would likely further damp capital expenditure monetary stimulus appears constrained where it’s needed most—in
and hiring, weakening growth next year. the Asean-5’s more open economies. Singapore and Thailand, for
The ability of companies to avoid punitive U.S. duties by divert- example, have fiscal firepower, but trade-war effects are large and
ing production from China to Asean nations appears limited. The the scope for monetary support is limited. Net exports account for
Trump administration’s offensive on trade is global, and Asean 25% of Singapore’s economy and 9% of Thailand’s. Investment in
countries are already in its crosshairs. both countries is about one-quarter of GDP.

34 SPECIAL REPO RT • B LO O M B ERG ECO N O M ICS


Australia

In Australia, Expansion Is
More Likely Than Recession
By TAMARA HENDERSON

AUSTRALIA’S GROWTH IS POISED to gain traction in the second half


of this year, setting the stage for a pickup in 2020. Risks of a Current Account Defies Trade War, Swings to Surplus
­recession appear low, with growth to be supported by rate cuts,
Australia’s current-account balance, seasonally adjusted, in Australian dollars
tax relief, and a recovery in the housing market. Even so, the cen-
Total Goods and services
tral bank’s forecast of a 2.75% expansion in 2020 might be hard
to achieve without further easing or a rollback in U.S.-China trade
war tariffs, which would strengthen global demand.
Growth was just 1.4% in the second quarter from the same 25b

period a year earlier, the weakest since the global financial crisis.
But a turnaround appears ahead. Election uncertainty has passed,
house prices are recovering, and government tax relief will augment
disposable income. The Reserve Bank of Australia has renewed 0

its easing cycle, cutting interest rates by 75 basis points from June

Household Spending Remains Key Q1’ 80 Q2 ’19 -25

Australia indicators, year-over-year change


Real GDP Household spending
Sources: Australian Bureau of Statistics

6%
Hong Kong may divert capital flows to Australia’s housing market.
After almost two years of monthly declines, the median
house price in Australian cities started rising in July. If sustained,
3
this turn in the housing market should start to boost consumption
by mid-2020. Household spending growth tends to track house
prices, with about a 12-month lag.
The escalation in trade tensions between the U.S. and ­China
Q4 ’98 Q2 ’19 0
has slowed A ­ ustralia’s export growth, as has a drought, which has
reduced farm output. Even so, net exports have soared, pushing
Sources: Australian Bureau of Statistics the current account into a rare surplus in the second quarter.
Several factors have cushioned the impact of the trade war
so far, including relatively resilient prices for Australia’s key
to October, and has left the door open for more stimulus. ­commodity exports and a softening in the Australian dollar against
The RBA’s aim in easing is to accelerate progress on inflation trading partners. Beijing’s retaliation against U.S. tariffs also
with a further tightening of the labor market. But it takes time for ­benefited Australia’s agricultural, tourism, and education sectors.
rate cuts to filter through to hiring decisions. What’s more, there’s At the same time, import growth slumped.
been an increase in the labor supply, with older workers and w
­ omen A recovery in household demand among Australians in 2020
entering the workforce. This pushed the jobless rate up to 5.3% would likely boost imports, creating a headwind to the country’s
in August. growth. But this might be offset to some degree by the stabiliza-
In the meantime, RBA rate cuts should help reinforce a tion of foreign demand, barring further escalation in U.S. tariffs.
­nascent recovery in the housing market. Demand will also be Easing by major central banks should also start to shore up ­global
­supported by looser mortgage lending rules. Prolonged unrest in demand in 2020.

35
Asia

In Search of Growth:
A Frontier Economy Scorecard
By YUKI MASUJIMA

FRONTIER ECONOMIES AREN’T IMMUNE to the global slowdown or providing fertile ground for catch-up in the digital economy.
the impact of the U.S-China trade war. But relatively fast, Underdeveloped infrastructure in frontier countries makes life
­domestic-demand driven growth should provide a buffer—for harder for businesses and deters foreign companies, hindering
some more than others. ­sustainable growth. The upside: They can start from scratch without
Bloomberg Economics’ Frontier Economy Scoreboard the cumbersome legacy of outmoded infrastructure. This is partic-
­suggests Rwanda, Kenya, and Vietnam are better positioned to ularly true in the digital economy. Proliferation of mobile phones and
ride out the bumps. The adoption of information technologies is ­greater fintech access are making it easier for people in rural areas
helping to support growth in Rwanda and Kenya. A shift in supply to shop and bank online, opening new avenues for growth.
chains out of China is giving a boost to Vietnam, which is also Heavy dependence on China is a challenge for some frontier
cashing in on a regional free-trade pact. economies. Those with closer trade and investment ties to China
The emphasis in the scoreboard is on assessing growth benefited when it was booming. These days, they’re feeling the
prospects and exposure to the trade war and China’s downturn drag from its slowdown. China’s penetration in trade is more
—key considerations in the current environment. In a different ­pronounced in Asia’s frontier. The Belt and Road Initiative has also
environment, if capital outflows were a key consideration, more led to increased Chinese lending to infrastructure projects in ­Africa
emphasis would be placed on capacity to service debts. and Central Asia, creating greater reliance on China.
Business conditions have been improving rapidly in the top The scoreboard tracks growth, growth drivers (business
three countries in the scorecard —Rwanda, Kenya, and Vietnam. climate and opportunities in the digital economy), and risks for 14
Each also has an advantage that could help it cope with the ­global frontier economies: seven in Africa (Ethiopia, Guinea, Ivory Coast,
slowdown and U.S. protectionism: Rwanda has a relatively low Kenya, Rwanda, Senegal, and Tanzania) and seven in Asia (Bangla-
level of dependence on China; Kenya has a high level of fintech desh, Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, and
development; and Vietnam boasts high mobile phone penetration, ­Vietnam). Each total score is an average of the 10 gauges.

Grading the Frontier


Frontier More positive More negative
economy

Growth Growth Drivers Risks

GDP Demography Ease of doing business Digital economy Dependence External debt China Composite
ranking
Change in Working-age Current Rank change, Mobile Fintech FDI share of Share of Share of
Outlook*
2018 (%) pop. ratio index ranking past 3 years phones† access (%)†† ’17 GDP (%) ’18 GDP (%) ’18 trade (%)
Rwanda 8.6 1.1 57.1 29 -30 79 4.6 3.1 35.1 7.7 1
Vietnam 7.1 -0.2 69.5 69 -22 147 20.5 5.8 43.1 27.1 2
Kenya 6.0 0.4 57.2 61 -52 96 26.1 0.8 29.6 20.1 3
Ivory Coast 7.4 -0.5 54.8 122 -17 135 7.1 2.3 31.2 9.1 4
Bangladesh 7.7 -0.4 67.0 176 -2 97 3.5 0.7 16.4 19.1 5
Senegal 6.2 0.6 54.3 141 -5 104 10.4 2.4 37.0 14.7 6
Uzbekistan 5.0 -2.1 67.3 76 -6 76 7.1 1.5 42.9 22.9 7
Myanmar 6.7 0.5 67.8 171 1 114 3.6 5.8 23.5 34.7 8
Tajikistan 7.0 -2.3 61.1 126 -4 112 12.8 2.9 78.2 27.9 9
Tanzania 6.6 -2.6 52.2 144 0 77 11.6 2.0 31.5 19.5 10
Cambodia 7.3 -0.3 64.2 138 10 119 3.8 12.7 48.5 16.0 11
Guinea 5.8 -2.7 54.8 152 -9 96 4.5 4.9 12.7 33.7 12
Ethiopia 7.7 -1.2 56.5 159 0 37 0.6 5.0 33.1 20.8 12
Laos 6.5 0.0 63.4 154 18 52 7.1 8.7 78.6 27.0 14

*Average annual percentage-point differential between the growth outlook for 2019-21 minus actual growth for 2016-18, based on IMF’s World Economic Outlook, April 2019; †Subscriptions per
100 persons, figures for Tajikistan, Ethiopia, and Uzbekistan as of 2017; ††Share of people age 15 and older who used the internet to pay bills or to buy something in the past year.
Sources: Bloomberg Economics, IMF, World Bank

36 SPECIAL REPO RT • B LO O M B ERG ECO N O M ICS


The
Americas
The Americas

Canada Can Count on a Strong Labor


Market and a Leg Up From Ottawa
By ANDREW HUSBY

CANADA’S EXPANSION WILL BE lackluster in 2020, weighed down markets. The trade-weighted Canadian dollar has been steady
by debt-laden consumers, global trade risks, and business uncer- since 2015, stabilizing after a 26% decline from ­early 2011 through
tainty. The country’s open economy isn’t immune to the impact December 2015.
of slower growth in the U.S. or the broader global manufacturing
malaise. A strong labor market and incremental policy stimulus
should prevent a slowdown from turning into something worse. More Exposed to Sluggish Trading Partners
Solid job gains, coupled with on-target inflation, stayed the
Bubble size denotes country’s share of Canada’s exports
Bank of Canada’s hand in 2019. Without clearer signs of significant
and sustainable progress in U.S.-China trade talks, we project a rate 2020 GDP
cut by early 2020 as global growth sags. Low government debt growth forecast
India, 0.8%
levels and a mild budget deficit mean Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s 6%
new minority government will have room to implement programs China
6.3%
to stimulate the economy.
In 2020 economic growth will hold near the low end of its
potential range (1.5%-2.1%, according to BOC estimates). Support 3
South Korea, 1.3%
from the consumer sector is weaker than strong job market numbers U.S.
suggest. In 2019 higher household debt levels, well above those 70.4%
U.K., 3.0% Mexico, 2.5%
seen in the U.S. before the 2008 financial crisis, plus earlier central Germany, 1.0% Japan, 2.6%
bank rate hikes in 2017 and 2018, led to the weakest pace of house- -8 0 6 0
hold spending growth since 2009. Given our view of limited BOC Percentage-point change in share of Canadian exports from 2007 to 2018
easing, any resulting reduction in ­consumer debt-servicing costs
will be modest. Sources: Bloomberg, IMF

The unemployment rate will hold steady as strong job gains


decelerate. In that context, stability or even a slight rise in the
jobless rate wouldn’t be a negative sign. Quicker wage inflation Limited exposure to faster-growing economies is also an
entices a greater share of the population to enter the labor force, obstacle. Exports to China are just over 6% of Canada’s total
putting some upward pressure on the unemployment rate, which ­exports, and exports to India make up less than 1%. While exposure
is good for an e­ xpansion’s durability. to the U.S. (70.4%) has diminished over the last decade, the bulk
After having a negative impact on growth in 2018 and 2019, of Canada’s trading partners are experiencing slow growth.
housing will make a modest contribution in 2020. The central Business uncertainty remains not only because of the
bank’s reprieve on rate increases injected new life in the economy U.S.-China trade conflict but also because of a divisive U.S. polit-
in late 2019, while a federal initiative that aids first-time ­buyers ical environment that leaves ratification of the United States-­
with down payments should bolster demand as housing supplies Mexico-Canada Agreement in limbo. A U.S. infrastructure plan will
remain tight, supporting prices. have to wait until after the 2020 election, restraining any boost to
Canadian manufacturing and exports should be stronger. complementary Canadian exports.
The economy is less competitive than Canada’s educated, diverse, Core inflation measures remain contained despite wage
well-­integrated workforce suggests. Headwinds include labor acceleration in the last half of 2019. Growth risks that tilt toward
shortages and bottlenecks in the energy sector, stricter regulations a wider output gap should continue to keep inflation in check and
and higher labor costs, and limited exposure to f­ aster-growing give the BOC space to act in support of the expansion.

38 SPECIAL REPO RT • B LO O M B ERG ECO N O M ICS


The Americas

A Quest for Growth Will


Set the Tone for Brazil
By ADRIANA DUPITA

IF 2019 WAS THE YEAR OF PENSION reform in Brazil, 2020 will be the would imply real interest rates of lower than 1% for the first time
year to focus on growth. Three issues will shape the c ­ oming year: in several decades. The narrowing interest-rate ­differential should
First, when and how growth will respond to record-low ­interest keep the currency under pressure. We see the real trading above
rates; second, how the government will respond if low rates fail 4.00 per U.S. dollar for most of 2020.
to ignite activity; and third, how the reform agenda will evolve The painfully slow recovery has revived debate on whether
before municipal elections in October. President Jair Bolsonaro’s economic team should rely on fiscal
We expect moderate growth of about 2% in 2020 will prevent stimulus in addition to rate cuts. We think this would be untimely.
the government from returning to fiscally irresponsible populist The government is still running a primary deficit greater than 1%
measures. But we’re growing skeptical that Congress will enact of gross domestic product, fueling a continued rise in the public
any significant reforms. debt, which is now about 80% of GDP. Should growth remain
Annual growth of 1% over the last three years didn’t bring lackluster, though, there may be greater political pressure for
Brazil’s output back to its pre-recession level. This has left the fiscal stimulus, as well as increased resistance to additional reforms
country with ample economic slack, which has kept inflation and necessary to nurse the public sector back to solvency.
inflation ­expectations below target—set at 4% for 2020. Interest Those reforms would include measures to control payroll and
rates have been at historical lows since early 2017, yet growth has other mandatory expenditures. According to the Doing ­Business
failed to respond. The culprit: low confidence. Neither consumer survey, the Brazilian tax system is the most time-­consuming in the
nor ­business confidence has returned to levels consistent with a world, and companies in Brazil spend 10 times longer than their
­stronger pace of growth. emerging-markets peers just filing their taxes. A tax overhaul that
We expect the central bank to deepen its monetary ­stimulus, reduces complexity would also be welcome for its effects on pro-
cutting the policy rate to 4.5% by the end of 2019 from 6.5% mid- ductivity, even if it doesn’t bring additional revenue. A
­ dvancing these
year. Risks seem inclined to the downside. Should growth contin- initiatives will be challenging. B
­ olsonaro lacks a majority in Congress,
ue to disappoint, and if inflation expectations remain well anchored, and legislative activity is expected to stall before midyear as politi-
we believe the central bank may bring rates closer to 4%, which cians focus on the October m ­ unicipal elections.

Sagging Consumer Confidence Saps Growth Pension Reform Only Prevents the Deficit From Rising

Brazil GDP growth, year-over-year Forecast pension expenditures as a share of GDP


Without reform
With reform
10% 10%
Brazil consumer
confidence index
100.4
5
88.5
9

Q3 ’05 Q2 ’19 -5 2020 2029 8

Sources: IBGE, FGV Sources: Ministry of Economy, Bloomberg Economics

39
The Americas

Government Plans, Trade Uncertainty


Will Weigh on Mexico
By FELIPE HERNANDEZ

LINGERING UNCERTAINTY WILL CONTINUE to weigh on Mexican plans continue to undermine business confidence. His decision to
i­nvestment and growth in 2020. This implies downside risks and abandon energy reform, cancel construction of the Mexico City
higher exposure to a possible external downturn or o ­ ther shocks. airport, and renegotiate pipeline contracts left a bad taste with
We expect output growth to accelerate modestly, to 1.5%, next investors. Officials and private investors have kept a dialogue going,
year, below the potential rate, which the central bank estimates is but results have been limited by their mutual distrust.
close to 2.0%-2.5%. With fuel shortages and workers’ strikes of the The government has reiterated its commitment to responsible
past year no longer a problem, the economy can pick up the pace. fiscal policy. Its spending remains limited by fiscal constraints, but
Exports should extend their upward trend and continue to better budget execution, common after a first year in office, would
outperform, as shipments benefit from outstanding trade pref- provide some relief. Optimistic revenue assumptions in the budget
erences and U.S. demand. Tariffs on U.S. imports from China would imply that additional spending cuts may be necessary to meet the
allow Mexico to continue gaining market share. goal of a primary fiscal surplus of 0.7% of gross domestic product in
Private consumption should rebound modestly in 2020. A 2020. Lower spending would weigh on plans to boost growth by
large minimum wage increase this year and next would provide increasing public investment. A wider deficit would raise broader
support, as would lower interest rates and abating inflation. With concerns and jeopardize the country’s­­i­nvestment-grade rating.
the country’s protracted slowdown and growing labor costs, fewer AMLO is likely to maintain strong support for Petróleos Mex-
jobs are being added and unemployment is rising, putting up obsta- icanos (Pemex), adding pressure on fiscal accounts. Amid a poten-
cles to growth. Falling consumer confidence would also be a drag. tial revenue shortfall and little room to accommodate a wider
deficit, this could accelerate the debate on tax reform.
We forecast average inflation will fall close to the midpoint
Subdued Investment Growth, With No Relief in Sight of the 3.0% +/- 1 percentage-point target in 2020. With greater
slack in the economy and less pressure from accumulated
Mexico gross fixed capital formation index, seasonally adjusted
exchange rate depreciation and supply shocks, core inflation is
Total Private Public
likely to ease. F ­ ollowing a sharp decline in fuel prices this year,
120 more stable prices should contribute to higher noncore inflation.
We expect the central bank to cut interest rates slowly, to
6.0%, by the end of 2020. Decelerating inflation and increasing
100 slack would allow policymakers to ease monetary conditions, and
low external interest rates should provide them with additional
flexibility. An implied real interest rate of almost 3.0% compares
80
with the central bank’s estimate of a neutral real rate near 2.6%.
External risks to the outlook include weaker-than-expected
Q1 ’12 Q2 ’19 60 U.S. growth and potential trade disruptions from tariffs or Nafta-
USMCA complications. A sustained drop in the global appetite for
Source: INEGI risk would also be a concern.
Domestic risks include the government deserting its com-
mitment to fiscal prudence and losing its investment-grade rating;
Investment should continue to underperform next year ongoing declines in oil production and deteriorating conditions at
because of uncertainty on U.S. trade relations and concerns over Pemex; and resilient inflation and inflation expectations, which
immigration and border security as the U.S. election nears. The could limit room for the central bank to ease monetary conditions.
ratification and implementation of the United States-Mexico-­ The real exchange rate has partially recovered from the sharp
Canada Agreement to replace Nafta could be further delayed if sell-off in 2015 and 2016, but it remains weak relative to exchange
Democrats in the U.S. House of Representatives are reluctant to rate data since 2001. A weaker currency has contributed to higher
hand President Trump a victory before the 2020 presidential elec- exports, lower imports, and a sharp adjustment in the trade balance
tion. In the short term, Nafta should remain in place, but it could and current account. The implied risk premium has fallen, but
come under fire amid the political debate. lingering uncertainty suggests volatility could remain high, and
Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador’s economic renewed pressure on the currency can’t be ruled out.

40 SPECIAL REPO RT • B LO O M B ERG ECO N O M ICS


The Americas

Challenges Mount for


Argentina’s Fernández
By ADRIANA DUPITA

ARGENTINA WILL FACE PLENTY of challenges in 2020, and they will rebalancing. That could allow for a program to alleviate poverty, but
shape the fate of the economy for years to come. Chief among would hardly be consistent with any attempt to fuel consumption
them are a deep recession, high inflation, huge debt maturities via subsidies or higher public-sector salaries or pension benefits.
early on, and a shaky relationship with the International Monetary We expect to see a clear monetary rule in 2020, even if it’s
Fund. It will be impossible to solve all the problems at once, and not as strict as the central bank’s abandoned target of mone-
it’s yet unclear what President-elect Alberto Fernández will tary-base stability over the past year. That would allow A ­ rgentina
­prioritize. There’s no room for policy experimentation or mis- to float its currency without the economy melting down. If all this
takes—and no time to waste. is done in a credible manner, we see stable gross domestic product
The good news is that there seems to be limited pent-up in 2020, with inflation falling moderately to below 40%. This would
depreciation pressure for the peso, which is critical for Argentina’s require a balanced budget and ­double-digit interest rates in real
heavily dollarized economy. Alternative measures show that recent terms into 2021.
capital controls haven’t yet substantially misaligned the currency. There are abundant risks to this view. The government may
This suggests that, should the government opt to remove those opt for a more confrontational approach, with a forceful debt
controls, the currency may depreciate only moderately, implying restructuring, discretionary rate cuts, fiscal stimulus, and inter-
a similar impact on dollarized domestic prices and debt. ventionist measures such as stricter capital controls and price
What happens to the peso over the medium term, though, will freezes. The result would probably be continued recession, an
depend largely on how the country handles its fiscal challenges and inflation spiral, and a resurgence in the black market for dollars.
conducts monetary policy. Floating the currency seems to be the It may opt for monetary and fiscal orthodoxy, but offset
most sustainable course of action. But if Argentina wants to evade a with an interventionist, protectionist approach elsewhere—i.e.,
currency meltdown, it will also need fiscal and monetary conservatism. price-­setting or domestic input minimums for production. This
Fiscal discipline is essential to keep the country from printing money could keep inflation and the currency under control, but might
to finance the government, which would weaken the currency and fail to revive growth.
fuel inflation. Some degree of monetary austerity is crucial to slow Finally, Argentina could begin a pro-market agenda—but
inflation, which has hovered around 50% since late 2018. then succumb to political pressure and reverse course if some of
In the best of times, such measures would be painful. In the those in Fernández’s political group and the population consider
middle of a long, deep recession, it would take great resolve for a the results insufficient.
government—even one empowered by a recent election win—to
bear the political costs. In 2020 the new administration will have
to choose between adopting such measures or resorting to quick Argentina Is Midway Through Rebalancing
fixes and shortcuts to avoid painful policies. Color indicates presidential administration
An early test will be how the government chooses to address Néstor Kirchner (May 2003 - Dec. 2007)
Argentina current-account
the mounting debt maturity at the beginning of the year. It seems Cristina Kirchner (Dec. 2007 - Dec. 2015)
Mauricio Macri (Dec. 2015 - present) balance as a share of GDP
likely Argentina will at least seek to renegotiate when the payments
are due, and possibly to reduce the value of the debt. Its best bet 2003 8%
for success is to repeat Uruguay’s strategy in 2003, when that country
negotiated a five-year postponement of debt payments with the 2019
’09 ’07
forecast
majority of its bondholders, and to do so with the IMF’s blessing. ’06 ’05 ’04
’12 ’08
But IMF help is usually conditional, with a floating currency,
’14 0
fiscal discipline, and monetary austerity as the traditional prescrip- ’15 ’11
’10
’16
tions. While the fund may be willing to accept a slow transition with ’13

transitory unconventional measures, such as partial capital controls ’17 ’18


and a temporarily managed currency, the conventional toolkit is - 8% 0 6% -6
likely to be part of the endgame if the IMF is to remain involved. Argentina fiscal balance as a share of GDP
We assume that Argentina will opt for an orderly exit from
the crisis. This will probably involve a haircut to privately held and Source: IMF data and forecast as of October 2019

IMF debt, coupled with a credible effort to effect a gradual fiscal

41
The Americas

Another Year of Subpar Growth


For the Andean Countries
By FELIPE HERNANDEZ

DECELERATING GLOBAL GROWTH and lower commodity prices will be Copper output should recover from transitory disruptions
hurdles in 2020 for the small, open, and commodity export-­oriented caused by floods this year and get a boost from increasing pro-
economies of Chile, Colombia, and Peru. Floating exchange rates, duction at the Chuquicamata mine. The outlook points to higher
credible inflation targets, and responsible fiscal goals should help exports and greater mining activity.
those economies adjust to the challenging external outlook. Consensus forecasts and forward contracts signal average
Policymakers will be happy to let their exchange rate float copper prices will be lower next year, which would imply weaker
to absorb the impact from any potential shocks. The currencies terms of trade. Oil prices are also expected to decline, partially
have recently depreciated in real terms, but they’re still stronger offsetting the drag.
than at the end of 2015. They’re not far from levels consistent with Expansionary monetary conditions should continue to
fundamentals, a sign there aren’t large imbalances. support domestic demand. Credit growth, in line with low interest
A protracted period of subpar growth has undermined gov- rates, is likely to keep rising.
ernment revenues, weighed on fiscal and debt figures, and left Investment will continue to benefit from the construction
little room for additional fiscal stimulus. Lower commodity prices of large mining projects, and government stimulus plans would
would also weigh on revenues. Sovereign debt ratings are already provide additional support.
under review. The main risks to the outlook are weaker-than-expected
Interest rates across the region are low and consistent with global growth and lower copper prices. Lingering social discontent
is also a concern.
We expect headline and core inflation to slowly increase
Economic Activity Maintains a Moderate Uptrend next year but remain below the midpoint of the 3.0 +/- ­1 percentage-­
Measure of economic activity, seasonally adjusted (index, 2013 = 100) point target. Higher prices of tradable goods, in line with accumu-
Peru Colombia Chile lated depreciation of the peso, would help explain the result.
Subdued prices for services, in line with lingering economic slack,
120 would limit the advance.
We expect the central bank to hold interest rates steady in
the first half of 2020. Officials would begin slowly reducing policy
110
accommodation in the second half as inflation approaches 3%.

100
Inflation Remains Within Target Range

1/2013 7/2019 90
Consumer price index, year-over-year, non-seasonally adjusted
Sources: Central Bank of Chile, DANE, INEI
Peru Colombia Chile

8%
expansionary monetary conditions. Credible central banks, low
inflation, and lingering economic slack imply there’s room for
further cuts. Low external interest rates also provide flexibility. 4
Political gridlock has hindered debate on reforms needed
to increase productivity and attract investment. This undermines
0
the region’s ability to withstand negative shocks.

Chile 1/2009 9/2019 -4


We expect economic growth to rise to 3.2% in 2020 from 2.2%
Sources: INE, DANE, INEI
this year, below potential growth of 3.4%. The forecast implies a
more stable, but still negative, output gap.

42 SPECIAL REPO RT • B LO O M B ERG ECO N O M ICS


The Americas

Colombia Lower-than-expected oil output and prices are important


We expect growth to fall to 2.8% in 2020 from 3.1% this year, below risks to the outlook for Colombia in 2020.
potential growth of 3.6%. That implies a negative and ­widening
output gap. Peru
Oil output, which peaked earlier this year, should start slowly We expect growth to rise to 3.4% in 2020 from 2.5% this year,
falling in 2020 as oil fields age and reserves stagnate. The outlook below potential of 3.6%.
points to weaker exports and declining mining activity, which helps Exports are likely to rebound in line with recovering mining
explain the lower growth projection. Consensus forecasts and activity after transitory shocks from floods in 2019. Additional
forward contracts anticipate lower oil prices, an additional drag. copper and gold output from mines that are starting production
Lower oil revenues would also have a negative impact on this year and next should contribute to growth.
­external and fiscal accounts. The accounts imply widening twin Consensus forecasts and forward contracts point to lower
deficits and risks that could contribute to additional depreciation average copper prices next year, which would imply weaker terms
of the peso. of trade. Gold prices are expected to increase and partially offset
We expect average inflation of 3.5% in 2020, close to the the drag.
level in 2019. Core inflation should increase to 3.4% from 2.7%, Political noise in Peru is poised to remain loud and weigh on
driven by accumulated peso depreciation, exchange-rate
­pass-through, and higher prices of tradable goods. Increasing
economic slack should limit pressure on prices and partially offset
the advance. Lower noncore prices, due to abating food inflation, Floating Currencies Absorb Shocks
would also contribute. Our forecast compares with a 3.0% +/-
1 percentage-point target. Real effective exchange rate of national currency (index, 2005 = 100)
We expect Colombia’s central bank to maintain interest Peru Colombia Chile
rates, which are already low and consistent with modest expan-
sionary monetary conditions. A widening negative output gap 140

would argue for more accommodation, but higher core inflation


and wider twin deficits should be a constraint.
120

Low Interest Rates Provide Stimulus 100

Ex-ante real monetary policy interest rate


Peru Colombia Chile 1/1999 9/2019 80

Source: Bank for International Settlements

3%
domestic demand. Legislative elections in January could weaken
the opposition in Congress. The government is unlikely to win
control and would still need support from other parties to pass
0
any ­legislation.
Lingering economic slack signals subdued price pressures,
with inflation remaining close to the midpoint of the 2.0% +/-
1/2009 9/2019 -3 1 percentage-point target. Lower oil prices would provide some
deflationary pressure. Consistent with expansionary monetary
Sources: Regional central banks
conditions, the central bank will keep interest rates low to
support growth.

43
The Americas

Rebound or Recoil? An
Emerging-Markets Scorecard
By SCOTT JOHNSON and TOM ORLIK

FOR MANY EMERGING MARKETS, 2020 is looking slightly better than In Colombia’s case, that gap is offset by stable inflows of foreign
2019. In a Goldilocks scenario, Fed rate cuts will stabilize U.S. direct investment.
growth—gifting emerging markets with steady capital flows and • Maturing debt: High levels of external debt maturing in the
strong external demand. That isn’t guaranteed. If an escalating next year could compound stress. Argentina tops the list, but it
trade war turns a global slowdown into a global downturn, a has the backing of the International Monetary Fund, at least for
­combination of weaker exports and capital outflows could push now. Malaysia and Taiwan look vulnerable by this measure.
vulnerable emerging markets back to the brink. • Currency risk: Drawing on work by Japan economist Yuki
In that risk-off scenario, our scorecard suggests Argentina Masujima, we create a risk ranking for currencies, regressing ­daily
and Turkey are most vulnerable to disruption, with South Africa changes on the CBOE Volatility Index (VIX), controlling for yield
and Colombia not far behind. differentials. South Africa, Colombia, and Turkey show up as the
To assess risk, we rank countries across seven metrics: most vulnerable in global risk-off moments. South Korea also looks
growth, the current account, external debt, exchange rate noticeably exposed.
­sensitivity, reserve coverage, inflation, and governance. • Reserve coverage: Ample foreign exchange reserves are a
• Growth: We compare expectations for 2020 gross domes- force for stability. Argentina and Turkey have reserve coverage
tic product growth with the 15-year average. Argentina—facing below the 100%-150% threshold the IMF considers adequate.
stagnation even on an optimistic read—stands out. Even in econ- • Inflation: High inflation erodes the value of investments.
omies likely to see acceleration—Turkey, Russia, and Brazil—the Argentina and Turkey appear most vulnerable on this metric.
pace is set to fall short of the long-run trend. • Governance: Questions about governance can erode
• Current-account balance: If the global outlook deteriorates, ­investor confidence. That was clear in Turkey in 2018, when threats
a dash for safety could punish economies that rely on external to central bank independence contributed to a slide in the ­currency.
funding. Colombia, South Africa, and Chile have the largest Based on metrics from the World Bank, Egypt and Brazil have the
­current-account deficits as a percentage of GDP. Details matter. biggest challenges in this area.

44 SPECIAL REPO RT • B LO O M B ERG ECO N O M ICS


The Americas

An Emerging-Markets Scorecard
Indicator More positive More negative
score

Projected GDP Current-account Short-term Rank of exchange Reserve coverage CPI inflation, ppt Government Vulnerability
growth in 2020 vs. balance as a share external debt as a rate sensitivity to as a share of deviation from effectiveness ranking (1 = most
15-year avg. (ppt) of GDP (%) share of GDP (%) market volatility adequacy (%) target in Q3 ’19 score in 2018 vulnerable)
Saudi Arabia -2.8 4.4 5.4 19 397.0 -4.1 0.32 15.9
Philippines 0.7 -2.0 5.9 11 183.0 -1.3 0.05 13.1
Thailand -1.9 6.0 19.3 14 201.8 -1.9 0.35 13.0
Taiwan -1.7 11.4 30.4 12 194.0 -0.6 1.36 13.0
Malaysia -0.9 3.1 40.8 18 115.7 -0.7 1.08 12.7
Egypt 1.3 -3.1 5.4 19 85.3 -4.5 -0.58 12.6
South Korea -1.4 3.2 11.8 6 113.2 -1.9 1.18 12.1
Russia -1.0 5.7 6.1 9 323.9 0.3 -0.06 12.0
Brazil -0.3 -1.2 7.7 8 159.9 -1.3 -0.45 11.6
India -0.6 -2.0 10.0 10 138.7 -0.5 0.28 11.3
Poland -1.0 -0.9 19.1 15 120.4 0.3 0.66 11.0
Peru -2.0 -1.9 6.3 16 239.9 0.0 -0.25 10.3
China -3.5 1.0 9.9 17 85.0 -0.1 0.48 10.1
Mexico -0.9 -1.2 7.8 13 116.1 0.3 -0.15 9.7
Indonesia -0.6 -2.9 5.8 5 77.6 -0.1 0.18 9.4
Chile -0.7 -3.5 16.5 4 89.5 -0.5 1.08 9.3
Colombia -1.3 -4.2 10.6 2 133.0 0.8 -0.09 6.1
South Africa -1.5 -3.1 17.9 1 65.5 -0.4 0.34 6.1
Turkey -3.1 -0.6 19.2 3 75.0 8.6 0.01 5.0
Argentina -3.3 -1.2 43.5 7 85.9 37.4 0.03 5.0

The vulnerability ranking is an equally weighted composite of country scores for the seven indicators. GDP growth forecasts are produced by Bloomberg Economics or, where unavailable, the IMF.
Current-account balance, short-term external debt, and foreign-exchange reserve coverage are IMF projections for 2019. Reserve coverage is relative to the IMF’s Assessing Reserve Adequacy
metric, which includes short-term external debt (excluding nonresident holdings of local treasuries), other external liabilities, broad money, and exports. Values for Taiwan’s short-term debt and
ARA have been estimated using national statistics, with data on longer-term bond amortization drawn from Bloomberg’s Fixed Income Search function {SRCH <Go>}. Exchange rate sensitivity is
relative to the VIX and estimated with separate regressions of one-day changes over 260 trading days, controlling for moves in yield differentials. CPI inflation reflects national quarterly figures
compared with the midpoint of central bank targets, where available. For countries without targets, inflation is primarily shown relative to the 15-year average annual value. Argentina’s figure reflects
its latest target, abandoned in 2018. Egypt’s target is assumed to evolve in a linear fashion from its Q4 ’18 level (13%) to its goal for Q4 ’20 (9%); we use 11.5% for Q3 ’19. Government effectiveness
is a World Bank rating.
Sources: Bloomberg Economics, IMF, World Bank, national statistics agencies

45
The Americas

Is the Dollar at a Record High?


Real Measures Say No
By DAVID POWELL

U.S. PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP’S tweeted complaints have focused markets and those from emerging markets. They show this broad
attention on the problem of dollar strength. He has a point. The measure has been driven higher over the last 40 years by the
currency is overvalued. In historical and international comparison, latter. All that’s demonstrating is that emerging-market currencies
however, it isn’t overvalued by enough to trigger a sharp correction. have lost value relative to the dollar through the tumultuous
Our preferred valuation model, which uses the ­International ­decades of devaluation and depreciation induced by high rates of
Monetary Fund’s methodology, indicates the real effective inflation—no big surprise.
­exchange rate (REER) of the dollar is overvalued by about 7.5%. The broad real dollar is the measure that matters for the real
Other models used by the IMF point to the U.S. currency economy and for evaluating the misalignment of the c ­ urrency. It’s
being 13% to 17% above its fair value—figures that don’t stand out adjusted for inflation, and therefore takes into account what the
as extreme given the experiences of other countries. The currency can actually buy. That time series paints a different picture.
­current-account deficit indicates only a modest overvaluation. The index was about 10% higher during the dot-com boom and
One simple metric—a purchasing power parity model—gives 25% stronger in the runup to the Plaza accord in 1985, when France,
more reason for pause. Germany, Japan, the U.K., and the U.S. agreed to manipulate
­exchange rates by depreciating the dollar relative to the Japanese
Keeping Track of Your Dollars and German currencies. However, the dollar’s fair value can change
Trump cares about the strength of the currency for reasons that over time, so that doesn’t tell us how overvalued it is.
differ from those of investors. He worries about its effect on the There are a slew of valuation models to determine the
real economy and his prospects for reelection. Through that lens, strength of a currency. The deviations they show can be used in
depreciation is attractive and every little bit helps. Asset manag- two ways. The first is to compare the misvaluation with those of
ers focus on whether concerns of overvaluation are sufficient to other ­currencies. That provides a sense of the level of mispricing
trigger a sharp reversal and the consequences for their portfolios. that the current environment may be able to support. The second
We’re looking at it from the latter perspective. is to look at the deviation relative to the currency’s past. That gives
On Aug. 30, as the euro dropped to more than a two-year an idea of what kind of misalignment a particular country can bear.
low against the U.S. dollar, Trump tweeted:
“The Euro is dropping against the Dollar ‘like crazy,’ giving The Bloomberg Economics Model
them a big export and manufacturing advantage … and the Fed Bloomberg Economics has replicated the IMF’s REER index m ­ odel
does NOTHING! Our Dollar is now the strongest in history. Sounds from the fund’s External Balance Assessment, and it’s our pre-
good, doesn’t it? Except to those (manufacturers) that make ferred tool for assessing currency strength. Looking at that, the
product for sale outside the U.S.” dollar’s appreciation doesn’t appear extreme relative to other
The only measure of the dollar that’s at a record high is the currencies. Those of several other developed countries are in the
broad trade-weighted nominal dollar. The Federal Reserve breaks same ballpark. In addition, the Thai baht, Indian rupee, Hungarian
its measure into two constituent parts: currencies from developed forint, and Czech koruna are almost 20% above our fair-value

46 SPECIAL REPO RT • B LO O M B ERG ECO N O M ICS


The Americas

Emerging Markets: More Overvalued Than the Dollar

Percentage difference between actual real effective exchange rate and fair-value estimate

-25% 0 25%

Thailand
India
Hungary
Czech Republic
Peru
Philippines
Belgium
Denmark
U.S.
Switzerland
Netherlands
estimates, or more than twice as overvalued as the dollar.
Canada
The greenback’s strength doesn’t look extreme from an
China
historical point of view, either. The U.S. currency was about 17%
Brazil
overvalued in the early 2000s. And its misvaluation was almost
Spain
5 percentage points greater in 2012 than now, though in the
Portugal
­opposite direction.
Finland
The IMF uses the same model to provide different fair-value
Italy
­estimates based on where fundamentals should be in the medium
Austria
term. Its latest figures showed an overvaluation of 8%, and the U.S.
New Zealand
REER has increased by about 5.2% since they were c ­ alculated,
Greece
pointing to total overvaluation of 13.2% at present. That’s not par-
Indonesia
ticularly extreme compared with numbers for Japan (-15%), Malay-
Euro area
South Korea
sia (-26%), Mexico (-18.9%), Turkey (-23.1%), and Sweden (-23.2%).
Australia
Germany
Alternative Models
Chile
The IMF has other valuation metrics as well. It introduced a REER
Poland level model (as opposed to the REER index model we replicated)
Russia in 2015 to explain differences in the level of relative prices across
Sweden countries. Once again, it shows that the dollar, with a current
Norway overvaluation of 17.1%, isn’t in a league of its own compared with
France figures for Belgium (20.6%), Malaysia (-37.5%), Turkey (-21.1%),
Japan or Switzerland (19.8%).
Ireland The IMF also has a method that focuses on current accounts.
U.K. Similarly, it indicates the dollar is a bit strong, but there’s no reason
Malaysia to press the panic button.
South Africa The purchasing power parity model on the Bloomberg ter-
Colombia minal shows the dollar is particularly overvalued against a few
Mexico currencies. Historically, PPP misvaluations of more than 20% have
Turkey been unsustainable. However, they only take into account the
prices of goods and services across countries; in reality, currency
Source: Bloomberg Economics movements are influenced by many other variables. A more com-
prehensive survey suggests it’s too early to fret.

47
Forecasts

Bloomberg Economics’ Forecasts

GDP (% YoY)1 Headline CPI (% YoY)2 Central bank rate (%)2


2019 2020 2021 2019 2020 2021 2019 2020 2021
North America
U.S. 2.2 2.0 1.9 2.3 2.3 2.3 1.50 1.50 1.50
Canada 1.5 1.5 1.5 2.0 2.1 2.1 1.50 1.50 2.00
Europe
Euro area 1.2 1.0 1.3 1.2 1.1 1.4 0.003 0.003 0.003
France 1.3 1.4 1.7 1.3 1.4 1.9 — — —
Germany 0.5 0.4 1.2 1.3 1.3 1.4 — — —
Italy 0.2 0.7 0.9 0.8 0.9 1.3 — — —
Russia 1.1 2.0 2.2 4.5 3.3 4.0 6.25 6.00 6.00
Spain 2.0 1.5 1.4 0.8 1.3 1.9 — — —
Sweden 2.4 0.9 1.5 1.7 1.5 1.5 0.00 0.00 0.00
U.K. 1.3 1.4 1.7 1.8 1.8 2.0 0.75 1.00 1.25
Asia
Australia 1.7 2.5 2.7 1.8 2.2 2.4 0.75 0.25 0.25
China 6.1 5.7 5.5 2.6 2.8 2.6 4.10 3.70 3.45
India4 6.88 5.7 7.1 3.48 3.7 3.5 6.255,8 4.505 4.505
Indonesia 5.0 5.2 5.5 3.5 3.5 3.5 5.00 4.75 4.75
Japan 0.9 0.2 0.6 0.87 0.6 0.7 -0.10 -0.10 0.00
Malaysia 4.2 4.5 5.0 1.5 1.8 2.0 3.00 2.75 2.75
Philippines 5.9 6.4 6.5 2.5 3.0 3.1 4.00 3.75 3.75
South Korea 1.9 2.3 2.5 0.4 1.3 1.4 1.25 1.25 1.25
Singapore -0.1 0.5 2.0 0.5 0.5 1.0 — — —
Thailand 1.8 2.9 4.0 0.5 0.5 1.0 1.25 1.25 1.25
Latin America
Argentina -2.6 0.0 2.1 52.1 38.5 29.3 60.00 45.00 35.00
Brazil 0.8 2.1 2.5 3.4 4.0 3.8 4.50 4.50 7.00
Chile 2.0 3.2 3.0 2.2 2.9 2.9 1.50 2.50 2.50
Colombia 3.0 2.8 2.7 3.6 3.5 3.4 4.25 4.25 4.25
Mexico 0.2 1.5 2.0 3.7 3.1 3.3 7.25 6.00 5.00
Peru 2.3 3.4 3.3 2.2 2.1 2.3 2.50 2.25 2.25
Middle East & Africa
Saudi Arabia 0.1 1.0 1.5 -0.3 2.0 2.0 2.005 2.005 2.005
Turkey 0.5 2.5 3.0 12.0 10.0 9.0 14.006 12.006 11.006

As of Nov. 8, 2019

Footnotes

1. Full-year growth
2. End-of-year forecast, except for Europe, China,
South Korea, and Philippines CPI, which are year average
3. Main refinancing operations rate
4. Fiscal-year forecast (e.g., 2020 refers to April ’19-March ’20)
5. Repo rate
6. One-week repo rate
7. Includes 0.9% sales tax hike effects
8. Fiscal 2019 values are actuals, not forecasts

48 SPECIAL REPO RT • B LO O M B ERG ECO N O M ICS


Contact Us

Stephanie Flanders
Head of Bloomberg
Economics
flanders@bloomberg.net
+44 20 3525 2581

Tom Orlik
Chief Economist
torlik4@bloomberg.net
+1 202 807 2185

Yuki Masujima
James Callan Senior Japan Economist Dan Hanson
Editor ymasujima@bloomberg.net Senior U.K. Economist
jcallan2@bloomberg.net +81 3 4565 7289 dhanson41@bloomberg.net
+1 212 617 5794 +44 20 3525 9851
Justin Jimenez
The Americas Megan O’Neil Research Associate Ferdinando Giugliano
U.S. Editor jjimenez68@bloomberg.net Europe Opinion Columnist
Carl Riccadonna moneil17@bloomberg.net +852 2977 2217 afgiugliano@bloomberg.net
Chief U.S. Economist +1 202 807 2103 +39 02 80644248
criccadonna3@bloomberg.net Jiyeun Lee
+1 212 617 6935 Richard Marquit Editor Johanna Jeansson
Project Manager/U.S. Editor jlee1029@bloomberg.net Nordic Economist
Adriana Dupita rmarquit@bloomberg.net +852 2293 1354 jjeansson2@bloomberg.net
Brazil and Argentina +1 212 617 4896 +46 8 6100715
Economist Arran Scott
adupita2@bloomberg.net Editor Scott Johnson
+55 11 2395 9496 Asia ascott101@bloomberg.net Russia Economist
+81 3 4565 8371 sjohnson166@bloomberg.net
Felipe Hernandez Chang Shu +44 20 3525 8027
Latin America Economist Chief Asia Economist
fhernandez35@bloomberg.net cshu21@bloomberg.net Europe, Middle East Ziad Daoud
+1 212 617 0353 +852 2293 1842 & Africa Chief Middle East Economist
zdaoud1@bloomberg.net
Andrew Husby David Qu Jamie Rush +971 4 449 2320
U.S. Economist China Economist Chief Europe Economist
ahusby1@bloomberg.net tqu7@bloomberg.net jmurray126@bloomberg.net Tim Farrand
+1 646 324 6478 +852 2293 1465 +44 20 3525 0867 Editor
tfarrand@bloomberg.net
Yelena Shulyatyeva Qian Wan David Powell +44 20 3525 7461
U.S. Economist China Economist Senior Euro-Area Economist
yshulyatyev2@bloomberg.net qwan18@bloomberg.net dpowell24@bloomberg.net Geoff King
+1 212 617 7390 +86 10 6649 7574 +44 20 3525 3769 Editor
gking56@bloomberg.net
Eliza Winger Abhishek Gupta Maeva Cousin +44 20 3525 9885
Research Associate India Economist Euro-Area Economist
ewinger4@bloomberg.net agupta571@bloomberg.net mcousin3@bloomberg.net
+1 646 324 5419 +91 22 6120 3735 +41 44 224 4107 Australia

Ben Baris Tamara Henderson Niraj Shah James McIntyre


Editor ASEAN Economist Europe Economist Australia Economist
bbaris1@bloomberg.net thenderson14@bloomberg.net nshah185@bloomberg.net jmcintyre61@bloomberg.net
+1 212 617 2459 +65 6212 1140 +44 20 3525 7383 +61 2 97777257
BECO
<GO>

You might also like