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Tuesday, November 30, 2021

Global economy rebounds, but for how long? - FRANCE 24

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Paris (AFP) – The world economy woke up from its pandemic-induced coma in 2021, but soaring inflation, global supply chain bottlenecks and a resurgent coronavirus have taken the shine off the comeback.

Now growth is at risk of weakening next year.

Here is a look at the state of the global economy:

Uneven recovery

Countries have posted impressive growth figures as they clawed their way out of the depths of the 2020 Covid-induced recession, but some are faring better than others as wealthier countries have had better access to vaccines.

The United States has overcome its worst downturn since the Great Depression while the eurozone's economy could return to pre-pandemic levels by the end of the year.

But a resurgence of the coronavirus could scupper the recovery, with the emergence of the Omicron variant raising new concerns.

"Covid-19 will remain a public health threat, particularly in countries where vaccination rates remain low," said analysts at Moody's credit ratings agency.

Many US employers had difficulty hiring enough employees to meet recovering business demand
Many US employers had difficulty hiring enough employees to meet recovering business demand MARIO TAMA GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP/File

With a 2.5 percent vaccination rate, the economy of sub-Saharan Africa is growing at a slower click, according to the International Monetary Fund.

Most emerging and developing countries should remain far behind their pre-pandemic forecasts by 2024, the IMF says.

Central banks in Brazil, Russia and South Korea have raised interest rates to combat rising inflation, a move that could rein in growth.

China, the world's second biggest economy and a driver of global growth, is facing a slew of risks: New coronavirus cases, an energy crunch and fears over the debt crisis at real estate giant Evergrande.

Inflation soars

Inflation has accelerated to multi-year highs around the world, as consumers returned with a vengeance and industries faced shortages.

Prices have soared across the board, with oil, natural gas and raw materials such as wood, copper and steel going through the roof.

"The biggest surprise of 2021 has been the goods-led inflation surge," Goldman Sachs analysts wrote in a 2022 outlook.

Central banks insist the inflationary pressure is a temporary consequence of economic activity returning to normal this year after it came to a halt when the pandemic erupted in 2020.

US inflation
US inflation Eléonore HUGHES AFP/File

Stock markets have hit new record highs this year, but investors are concerned that central banks will withdraw their stimulus programmes and raise interest rates earlier than expected to tame inflation.

"The question is whether we really are in the end of the crisis," said Roel Beetsma professor of macroeconomics at the University of Amsterdam.

Widespread shortages

Industries have struggled to keep up with a surge in demand from consumers.

Global trade has been disrupted by insufficient shipping containers, congestion at ports and labour shortages.

One key component that is hard to come by these days is semiconductors, chips used in everything from phones to video game consoles to the electronic systems of cars.

Shortages of computer chips held back production of cars and some consumer goods
Shortages of computer chips held back production of cars and some consumer goods JENS SCHLUETER AFP/File

The shortage has been so bad that several automakers have had to temporarily halt production at some factories.

Labour shortages have added to the problem as truck drivers, port workers and cashiers have not returned to work following lockdowns.

Despite the difficulties, the IMF expects the world economy to grow by a healthy 4.9 percent next year.

Climate change

In addition to the pandemic, economies had to come to grips with another life-threatening event this year: climate change.

The conflict between economic growth and saving the planet came to the fore at the COP26 climate summit in Glasgow, Scotland, this month.

Nearly 200 nations signed a deal to try to halt runaway global warming after two weeks of painful negotiations, but fell short of what scientists say is needed to contain dangerous rises.

Fires during heatwaves which experts have linked to climate change have caused much damage in parts of Europe and the United States
Fires during heatwaves which experts have linked to climate change have caused much damage in parts of Europe and the United States ANGELOS TZORTZINIS AFP/File

Droughts and other climate catastrophes threaten to further drive up food prices, which jumped to a 10-year high in October, according to the Food and Agriculture Organization.

Wheat has soared by 40 percent in the past year while dairy products are up 15 percent and vegetable oils reach new records.

"It's pretty obvious. Everything has gone up," said Nabiha Abid, a resident of Tunisia's capital, noting that the price of meat has doubled.

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Global economy rebounds, but for how long? - FRANCE 24
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India's Economy Grows by 8.4% Amid Signs of Recovery - U.S. News & World Report

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India's Economy Grows by 8.4% Amid Signs of Recovery  U.S. News & World Report
India's Economy Grows by 8.4% Amid Signs of Recovery - U.S. News & World Report
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'A temporary interruption': Economy could take slight hit from omicron variant in 2022, experts say - USA TODAY

As omicron piles on economic fears, Canadian outlook offers glimmer of bland optimism - CBC.ca

Headlines that make the heart race may be good for the news business, but they aren't so hot for economic stability.

Amidst a fireworks display of breaking stories that include warnings of a new and potentially worse COVID-19 variant of concern, Friday's stock market tumble, worrying inflation updates and a new round of supply chain problems caused by B.C.'s flooding, data out this week on the Canadian economy is expected to be reassuringly bland.

And after a weekend of hand-wringing, there are increasing signs — at least in financial circles — that despite a name that sounds like a Marvel Comics villain, the omicron variant is just more of the same.

Stocks and oil rebound

"Investors [are] betting that the impact of the omicron COVID-19 variant will be less profound than initially feared," the Wall Street Journal reported Monday, as stocks and oil rebounded from "their largest one-day percentage decline since April 2020."

Of course, there remains plenty to learn about the latest coronavirus variant and its impact on the Canadian economy, but a new stream of business news out this week — including the country's growth rate, unemployment figures and the state of Canada's banks — is expected to be reassuring.

While Canadian inflation hovering near five per cent remains a worry, new data for gross domestic product, out later this morning, is not expected to show the kind of economic growth that would set inflation soaring.

A customer enters a fast-food restaurant with 'Help Wanted' signs posted in Laval, Que. Employers across the country are dealing with labour shortages. (Ryan Remiorz/The Canadian Press)
Instead, economists assess that the data from July to September will show the economy grew at an annualized rate of 3.2 per cent. If that's the way things turn out, it will be a sharp bounce-back from an economy that shrank in the second quarter.

While that is healthy growth for an advanced economy, it is also bland enough to avoid sparking new inflationary fears. 

As Bank of Montreal economist Doug Porter said in a report to investors earlier this month: "Given the wildness of the prior 18 months, no one is complaining about ho-hum."

When Statistics Canada released its data on Tuesday morning, it was not so ho-hum as had been predicted — with an annualized growth rate of 5.4 per cent.

Meanwhile, BMO's results will be out Friday, at the end of a series of bank-profit numbers that begin Tuesday with the Bank of Nova Scotia. Despite all the gloomy economic headlines, Reuters is predicting a boost in dividends, saying Canadian banks, as a group, are "set to post strong results."

Optimism on the upswing

Lower down the financial food chain, the Canadian Federation of Independent Business has released a moderately optimistic outlook in its monthly Business Barometer

Small business owners are a bit like Canadian farmers, who will never admit to things being absolutely good; so a CFIB release that says, "Overall, small business optimism is on an upswing," sounds positively buoyant. 

Among the CFIB report's reservations are that its optimism index has not gained back September's losses and a growing expectation of sharply rising prices and higher wages in coming months.

WATCH | Rising food prices a major contributor to Canada's inflation rate:

Rising food prices contribute to 18-year high inflation

1 month ago
The continued increase in food prices is a major contributor to Canada’s inflation rate reaching an 18-year high and some economists say the rising costs could last longer than initially thought. 2:30

"We have never observed price and wage increase plans at this level in the monthly barometer's 12-year history," said Andreea Bourgeois, a senior research analyst at CFIB.

"Price increase plans over the next 12 months reached 4.3 per cent in November, while wage plans reached 3.1 per cent, a 0.6 percentage point increase since last month and the highest level recorded since CFIB started publishing its monthly Business Barometer in 2009," said the CFIB summary of its report.

Goldilocks growth

While high, those expectations indicate small business is following — not leading — inflation that hit 4.7 per cent last month.

Something else economy-watchers will pay close attention to this week will be November auto sales figures, which come out on the first of the month — a fresh indicator of the extent to which seasonally adjusted vehicle purchases are improving or worsening, as supply chain problems work their way through the economy.

"We can't go back and change what's happened," said Bank of Canada governor Tiff Macklem on Monday, speaking at the bank's Symposium on Indigenous Economies. "But we can try to correct some of the consequences that arose from ugly periods in our past."

Bank of Canada Governor Tiff Macklem speaks during a news conference in Ottawa on Oct. 27. (Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press)

Macklem was of course referring to Canada's notorious historic treatment of Indigenous people

But in a very different context, that is what the country's top central banker has said he would like to see in economic and jobs growth, too. And Macklem wants it to be not too fast and not too slow.

Currently, that is exactly what Canadian economists are forecasting for Friday's jobs numbers. They estimate that the economy will crank out between 30,000 and 40,000 jobs, ticking the unemployment rate down another point to 6.6 per cent.

As in the story of Goldilocks and the Three Bears, that kind of unemployment growth is not too hot and not too cold — it's just right for an economy worried about inflation.

If that's the way it turns out, this week's economic figures could signal a fairy-tale ending for what has been another hectic year.


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As omicron piles on economic fears, Canadian outlook offers glimmer of bland optimism - CBC.ca
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Turkey’s economy grows 7.4% in Q3, but lira crisis risks mount - Aljazeera.com

Turkey’s economy powered ahead of most of its peers in Q3, but soaring inflation and a currency crisis could pose a threat to that recovery.

By Bloomberg

Turkey’s economy zoomed ahead of most peers to expand 7.4% in the third quarter, but soaring inflation and a slump in the lira mean the surge could be short-lived.

Growth during the three months through September matched the median forecast among nine economists surveyed by Bloomberg. The seasonally and working day-adjusted figures showed an expansion of 2.7% in the last quarter from the previous three months, when gross domestic product surged 22% as the economy bounced back from the worst phase of the pandemic.

The lira weakened after the data release, trading 0.5% lower at 12.8884 against the dollar at 11:47 a.m. in Istanbul. The currency has hit a series of record lows in recent weeks as the central bank has embarked on a cycle of interest-rate cuts that have turbo-boosted growth but hit incomes and shaken confidence.

Investors have warned against further easing, arguing that uncontrolled inflation would ultimately act as a brake on growth, and even drag the economy into recession.

“With the current acute lira selloff akin to the 2018 episode which triggered a recession, our expectation is for the growth momentum to markedly weaken in the quarters ahead owing to higher FX volatility and a decline in purchasing power,” Ehsan Khoman, head of emerging market research for Europe, Middle East and Africa at MUFG Bank in Dubai, said after the data.

Khoman said growth would slow from a projected 8.8% for this year to 3.4% in 2022, with the risk firmly on the downside. He predicted that the central bank would push ahead with cuts for now but be forced to increase borrowing costs to 20% next year to stabilize the economy.

Inanc Sozer, an economist at Istanbul-based Virtus Glocal Consulting said the economy could even contract next year if the central bank continues on its current path.

Turkey’s central bank has slashed 4 percentage points off borrowing rates since September, as President Recep Tayyip Erdogan pushes to revive his flagging popularity ahead of 2023 elections by delivering robust growth and more jobs.

Soaring inflation has hit purchasing power, however, which means some of the strongest real GDP growth among Group of 20 nations isn’t translating into better living standards for many households.

While exporters benefit from the weaker lira and property-owners cash in on rising rents and house prices, among the worst hit are working class Turks — Erdogan’s traditional base.

Below are some more highlights from the GDP report released by the state statistics institute in Ankara on Tuesday:

  • Household consumption – estimated to account for about two-thirds of the economy – continues to be one of the main drivers of growth. It jumped 9.1% from a year earlier.
  • Annual GDP grew to $795.2 billion in the third quarter from $765 billion through the previous three-month period.
  • Exports jumped 25.6% on an annual basis. Imports dropped 8.3%.
    Gross fixed capital formation, a measure of investment by businesses, shrank an annual 2.4%.
  • Government spending rose 9.6% after a revised 3.4% increase in the previous quarter.

Leading indicators show activity remains strong in the fourth quarter even as the official economic confidence index dropped to 99.3 in November, compared to 101.4 in the previous month.

Central bank Governor Sahap Kavcioglu will chair the next rate-setting meeting on Dec. 16, with Erdogan maintaining his pressure for further rate cuts.

(Recasts with forward-looking guidance from analysts)
–With assistance from Ugur Yilmaz.

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Turkey’s economy grows 7.4% in Q3, but lira crisis risks mount - Aljazeera.com
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Canadian economy seen strengthening, but analysts wary of Omicron impact - Reuters

A construction crane is seen above Brookfield's Bay Adelaide North, the third office tower to be constructed at their Bay Adelaide Centre complex property in Toronto, Ontario, Canada April 14, 2021. REUTERS/Chris Helgren/File Photo

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OTTAWA, Nov 30 (Reuters) - The Canadian economy roared back in the third quarter, with growth most likely accelerating in October on a manufacturing rebound, though economists were cautious on the looming impact of the Omicron COVID-19 variant.

Canada's economy grew 5.4% in the third quarter on an annualized basis, beating analyst expectations for a gain of 3.0%, Statistics Canada data showed. A preliminary estimate for October showed a gain of 0.8%, while September's GDP was in line with expectations for a 0.1% rise.

Statscan revised down annualized second-quarter GDP to a contraction of 3.2% from a previous dip of 1.1%. But with the October gain, economic activity is now just 0.5% below pre-pandemic levels.

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"The October increase was maybe more encouraging for the speed of recovery even than the third quarter numbers," said Nathan Janzen, senior economist at Royal Bank of Canada.

"There is a lot of uncertainty right now about how long this can be sustained just given ... the Omicron variant."

The third-quarter rebound was driven by one of the largest household spending sprees on record, as COVID-19 restrictions were eased and consumers bought everything from clothing to personal grooming services. Exports were also up, led by crude oil.

"We had a pretty strong showing in consumer spending. So that was nice to see after the weakness we had in the second quarter," said Jimmy Jean, chief economist at Desjardins Group.

"But now the question is what's going to happen in fourth quarter," he added, pointing to both the emergence of the Omicron variant and flooding in the western province of British Columbia that cut off a key port from the rest of Canada. "It seems the more we go into the quarter the risk has tilted to the downside."

Canada has reported five cases of the Omicron variant. The health minister in the province of Quebec warned residents to rethink holiday travel. read more

The Bank of Canada last month signaled it could start hiking rates as soon as April 2022, with inflation set to stay above target through much of next year due to supply chain bottlenecks and high energy prices. read more

The Canadian dollar was trading 0.2% lower at 1.2768 to the greenback, or 78.32 U.S. cents. Investors are pricing in a first rate hike in either March or April. BOCWATCH

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Additional reporting by David Ljunggren and Steve Scherer, and Fergal Smith in Toronto; Editing by Andrew Heavens and Paul Simao

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Canadian economy seen strengthening, but analysts wary of Omicron impact - Reuters
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Province Invests in Waterloo Barbecue Manufacturer to Boost Regional Economy - Government of Ontario News

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Province Invests in Waterloo Barbecue Manufacturer to Boost Regional Economy  Government of Ontario News
Province Invests in Waterloo Barbecue Manufacturer to Boost Regional Economy - Government of Ontario News
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India’s economic recovery gathers pace as Omicron looms - Aljazeera.com

India’s GDP is expected to strengthen in the July-September quarter, helped by an uptick in consumer spending.

India is expected to remain on track to post the fastest economic growth among major economies even as the spread of the Omicron coronavirus variant has raised fears for the future.

The country’s economic recovery is expected to strengthen in the July-September quarter, helped by an uptick in consumer spending, data due later Tuesday is expected to show.

Asia’s third-largest economy has been seeing a rebound from last year’s deep slump, boosted by rising vaccination rates and increased government spending.

A Reuters survey of 44 economists projected GDP data will show 8.4 percent year-on-year growth in the September quarter, the fastest pace among major economies, vs a 7.5 percent contraction in the same quarter last year.

The projected growth is slower than 20.1 percent growth in the previous quarter – which largely reflected a bounce back from last year’s crash – but marks a fourth straight quarter of expansion.

The recovery is “led by the services sector, with individual mobility back to pre-COVID levels, and ultra-accommodative financial conditions,” as well as higher government expenditures, said Gaura Sen Gupta, an economist with IDFC First Bank in Mumbai.

While she said it was too early to predict the impact of the omicron strain, the cost of lockdowns has been falling as they become more targeted and shorter.

The improvement in workplace mobility became possible due to the government’s extensive vaccination programme, Sunil Sinha, principal economist at India Ratings and Research, said in a statement emailed to Al Jazeera. Cumulative vaccinations in India leapfrogged to 890.21 million at the end of the September quarter, up from 335.72 million at the end of the previous quarter, the ratings agency said.

Sinha, however, warned that growth numbers should be “interpreted with caution” as growth in the first six months of the current financial year was “mainly due to the lower base” of the same period last year.

Fast-moving indicators including exports, electricity generation, rail freight and bank deposits showed improving signs of growth momentum in October while vehicle sales, fuel sales and tax collection showed slower growth.

Testing at airports

Private economists have said the economy is on the cusp of recovery helped by a resilient farm sector growth, but risks included slowing global growth, rising manufacturing prices as well as new variants of COVID-19.

As the market awaited the figures, health authorities warned they were tightening testing at airports in the wake of the spread of the Omicron variant. Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Saturday ordered a review of plans to ease travel curbs.

“COVID risks have resurfaced globally and (these need to be watched) for implications for the timing of monetary policy normalization,” Shubhada Rao, economist at Mumbai-based QuantEco Research, said.

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI), which has cut key interest rates to record lows and infused massive liquidity to shore up the economy, is widely expected to suck out liquidity before normalising rates amid growing inflationary concerns.

RBI has forecast annual growth of 9.5 percent in the current fiscal year.

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India’s economic recovery gathers pace as Omicron looms - Aljazeera.com
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How Much of a Threat Is the Omicron Variant to the Economy? - The New Yorker

How will the coronavirus omicron variant affect the economy? - Marketplace.org

Scientists are racing to figure out omicron, the new coronavirus “variant of concern,” and governments are scrambling to devise strategies for dealing with it. Several have rushed to enact new travel bans and dust off mask requirements.

On Friday, the United States announced that it would ban visitors from South Africa and seven other countries in the region. And on Monday, President Joe Biden said he expects no additional travel bans and doesn’t think new shutdowns are necessary.

So what might omicron have in store for the U.S. economy?

We don’t need more lockdowns for the virus to damage the economy. It can do that via plain old fear. Gad Levanon, who heads the labor market institute at The Conference Board, said that if omicron turns out to be, say, a slightly worse delta, we might expect a similar economic result.

“Spending on leisure and hospitality would be impacted, spending by older people and families with young children that are not vaccinated — they will be spending less — and especially, I think, tourism will take a big hit,” he said.

The U.S. has ended up trying to manage the virus rather than stamp it out, but some other countries — countries with whom the U.S. trades — are inclined to take a stricter approach.

“China is still persisting with its zero-COVID policy, so if we saw more disruption and closures of factories, that would weigh on supply chain problems that have already been an issue,” said Paul Ashworth, chief U.S. economist at Capital Economics.

How omicron might affect inflation is another question that, for now, is unclear.

“In the near term, you’re going to have a sharp, sudden reduction in consumer demand,” said Ian Bremmer, president of Eurasia Group.

That would bring inflation down. But if omicron turns out to be particularly serious, supply chain problems might intensify in a month’s time, keeping prices up. “The effect is mixed but differs over time,” Bremmer said.

We don’t know yet what threat omicron poses to global health, but we do know that the virus controls the economy, and the information we get over the next few weeks will dictate the path our economy takes.

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How will the coronavirus omicron variant affect the economy? - Marketplace.org
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Monday, November 29, 2021

Global economy will grow if world holds global warming below 1.5 C, study says - Financial Post

As well as protecting the planet, achieving net zero would have long-term economic benefits

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The global economy will be two per cent bigger by the end of the century if the world can hold global warming below 1.5 degrees Celsius, according to a new study.

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Most models predict a period in which the world surpasses that mark for several years or decades, before cooling back down to the 1.5 degree mark by 2100. This would require removing existing carbon from the atmosphere on an impractically large scale, according to research published in the journal Nature Climate Change.

Drawing on modelling from nine teams, lead researcher Keywan Riahi, director of the energy program at Austrian research institute IIASA, found that may be impossible, and a temporary overshoot would likely increase extreme weather such as flooding and wildfires. To avoid permanent damage to ecosystems, the world must avoid surpassing the mark altogether, the report warned. In doing so, there will be less need to remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere — a process known as net-negative emissions.

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In fact, global GDP could grow even more than two per cent, according to another co-author, Laurent Drouet, a senior scientist at climate research group CMCC in Italy. Drouet said the calculation used in the study doesn’t include the economic damage of climate change, which would be more severe above 1.5 degrees.

The study warned that to remain beneath that threshold, countries must improve their emissions goals under the Paris Agreement framework. The current pledges imply a slow start to mitigation and need to be ramped up dramatically, the report said.

The transport sector is key to success, according to the study. A recent report by global climate leadership group C40 Cities says global public transit use must double by 2030 to meet the targets.

Daniel Huppmann, co-author and a researcher at the IIASA, called for radical change in transport to support decarbonization. “A mobility revolution will be crucial to reducing dependence on net-negative emissions technologies and to mitigate their risks and negative societal impact,” he said.

Bloomberg.com

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Global economy will grow if world holds global warming below 1.5 C, study says - Financial Post
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Global Economy Can Grow If World Warms Less Than 1.5°C, Study Says - Bloomberg

The global economy will be 2% bigger by the end of the century if the world can hold global warming below 1.5 degrees Celsius, according to a new study.

Most models predict a period in which the world surpasses that mark for several years or decades, before cooling back down to the 1.5 degree mark (2.7 Fahrenheit) by 2100. This would require removing existing carbon from the atmosphere on an impractically large scale, according to research published in the journal  Nature Climate Change.

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Global Economy Can Grow If World Warms Less Than 1.5°C, Study Says - Bloomberg
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The economy is getting back to normal? We don't even know what that looks like any more | Greg Jericho - The Guardian

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The economy is getting back to normal? We don't even know what that looks like any more | Greg Jericho  The Guardian
The economy is getting back to normal? We don't even know what that looks like any more | Greg Jericho - The Guardian
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How omicron could impact the economy as virus reaches from Australia to Canada in widening spread - Financial Post

The variant is dealing a blow to optimistic hopes that the world economy would enter 2022 on a firmer footing

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The omicron variant is dealing a blow to optimistic hopes that the world economy would enter 2022 on a firmer footing, potentially undermining plans by policy makers to focus on inflation rather than weak demand.

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The imposition of travel restrictions will shake consumer and corporate confidence, likely limiting activity in some places just as the holiday season gets underway in many economies. Japan will effectively ban the entry of all foreign visitors as part of its plan to curb the virus spread, broadcaster NTV reported.

The omicron variant of COVID-19, first identified in South Africa, has been detected in locations from Australia to Germany and Canada, showing the difficulties of curtailing new strains.

Most infections stem from travellers carrying the disease across borders. Israel, for instance, said a confirmed case who arrived from Malawi rode on a bus from Tel Aviv. Italy’s first case traveled around the country for days before testing positive.

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Researchers worldwide are racing to understand the full impact of the new strain , and governments have banned travellers from South Africa and nearby countries on concerns omicron could evade the protection of vaccines and fuel new surges.

Markets moved swiftly to price in an economic blow. Expectations for interest-rate increases over the coming year dropped by at least 10 basis points on Friday for the central banks of the U.S., U.K. and Australia.

What comes next will be dictated by what scientists discover about the new COVID-19 variant, including how resistant it is to vaccines and how more transmissible it is than the delta variant which raged in recent months without sending economies back toward recessions.

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The worst case scenario would be if the mutation necessitates a return to growth-crippling lockdowns, which would threaten already strained supply chains and damage recovering demand. That would reignite fears of a stagflationary mix of faster inflation and slower growth.

Goldman Sachs Group Inc. economists spelled out four possibilities , one of which includes a downside scenario where a large infection wave in the first quarter of next year sees global growth slow to a 2 per cent quarter-on-quarter annual rate — 2.5 percentage points below their current forecast. Growth in 2022 as a whole would be 4.2 per cent, or 0.4 percentage point below forecast.

A benign outcome is that the mutation doesn’t prove as threatening as initially feared. But its emergence serves as a reminder that the pandemic will remain a threat for the global economy, potentially for years to come.

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“We are not yet in stagflation,” said Alicia Garcia Herrero, chief Asia Pacific economist with Natixis SA. “But one more year without cross-border mobility and related supply chain disruptions might push us there.”

Smaller Impact

Even still, some economists say the fallout may be less than seen during the 2020 recession.

Governments, albeit not China’s, have shown a reluctance to rush back into lockdowns. And the supply of vaccines partly explains why high frequency data suggest curbs that have been imposed in Europe have proved more flexible and less damaging to growth.

“Businesses and households have adapted to restrictions and lockdowns and so the blows may not be as severe this time around,” said Rob Subbaraman, head of global markets research at Nomura Holdings Inc.

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“That would mean localized lockdowns as outbreaks emerge, tighter restrictions on regional travel and a greater likelihood of port shutdowns,” he said. “China has proved adept at managing outbreaks, but the long-run economic costs will mount if highly-transmissible strains are endemic globally.”

If the variant spreads “it could slow the healthy momentum in the economy” of the U.S., according to Mickey Levy, chief economist for the U.S. and Asia at Berenberg Capital Markets.

Markets calmed in early Asia trade Monday after a sharp sell-off Friday as news of the variant arose. S&P 500, Nasdaq 100 and European contracts jumped and oil rallied back above US$70 a barrel.

Before omicron emerged, some economists had tipped a transition in demand away from durable goods and toward services such as leisure, travel and tourism. But that switch may now be delayed — denting prospects for a global recovery that is already uneven.

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The International Monetary Fund in October warned that the recovery has lost momentum and become increasingly divided. The fund calculated gross domestic product for advanced economies will regain its pre-pandemic level in 2022 and even exceed it by 0.9 per cent in 2024; it reckoned emerging and developing markets would still undershoot their pre-pandemic forecast by 5.5 per cent in 2024.

Policy Options

One challenge for policy makers battling the economic aftershocks of a sustained outbreak will be the fact that they have fewer options after last year’s stimulus effort.

Only a handful of central banks have tightened monetary policy since the end of last year’s recession and the developed world’s key benchmarks remain around zero, meaning they lack room to come to the rescue again. Governments are already shouldering soaring debt burdens.

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“In the absence of concerns about any negative impact of the variant, the Fed would in all probability speed up its tapering of asset purchases, but the uncertain downside effects of the variant likely leads the Fed to postpone any such decision,” said Levy.

  1. Travellers queue at an area for polymerase chain reaction (PCR) Covid-19 tests at OR Tambo International Airport in Johannesburg on Nov. 27, 2021.

    Omicron ‘mild’ so far, experts say, but WHO urges caution

  2. A container ship sits docked at the Port of Vancouver on Nov. 20, 2021 in Vancouver, B.C.

    Port of Vancouver CEO calls for climate change action to reduce future trade bottlenecks

  3. The entrance to a blueberry farm is blocked by rising flood waters on Nov. 18, 2021 in Abbotsford, B.C.

    Economists cut growth forecasts on B.C. floods, but see rate hikes on track

Traders have rushed to wager that the Federal Reserve and its peers will be slower to raise rates. Futures signal the first Fed hike may not come until July 2022, a month later than was seen last Wednesday when June was the first month with an increase fully priced in.

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Even so, Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta President Raphael Bostic on Friday played down the risk of the new variant and remained “very open” to accelerating the withdrawal of the Fed’s asset purchase program.

European Central Bank Governor Luis de Guindos said he too thought “the effects over the economy will be more limited than last year.”

Policy makers have proved adept at changing tack if required. If nothing else, the existence of omicron shows the perils of making predictions in the pandemic age.

“One thing is for sure, the economic uncertainty has risen even higher: economists need a big dose of humility in forecasting the 2022 outlooks,” said Subbaraman. “That dose has now got even bigger.”

Bloomberg.com

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How omicron could impact the economy as virus reaches from Australia to Canada in widening spread - Financial Post
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Why Quebec has Canada's hottest economy – and growing equalization payments - The Globe and Mail

Quebec Premier François Legault has set the ambitious long-term goal of increasing his province’s economic growth to the point that it no longer needs or receives equalization payments.

The province’s fiscal update last week showed that Mr. Legault is making some progress on that goal, with Quebec upgrading its growth forecasts as it rebounds quickly from the effects of the coronavirus contraction.

“The pandemic will be just a bad dream, starting next fiscal year,” said Robert Hogue, senior economist at the Royal Bank of Canada.

The Finance Ministry also laid out how Quebec has narrowed the income gap with Ontario since 2017, part of a push to eliminate that gap entirely by 2036.

And several pages earlier in that same document, the Finance Ministry mentioned that equalization payments to the province would jump to $13.474-billion next year, $355-million more than was forecast in the spring budget.

What’s more, Quebec’s share of equalization payments through to fiscal 2025-26, while declining, will also be higher than forecast in the budget. The province now says it will receive 54.2 per cent of federal equalization payments in 2025-26, up from the earlier projection of 53.1 per cent.

That Quebec’s nation-leading prosperity can coincide with richer equalization payments is a testament to just how far the equalization program has veered from its original purpose of ensuring that provinces can provide roughly comparable services at roughly comparable levels of taxation.

Driving that deviation is the funding formula put in place by the Harper government 13 years ago, aimed at keeping a lid on the cost of equalization as Alberta’s supernova energy revenues dramatically inflated the fiscal disparities between the provinces. Then, the decision to tie growth in equalization payments to the three-year average growth in national nominal gross domestic product acted as a ceiling on costs.

Now, it’s acting more like a fast-moving escalator. This year’s exceptional surge in nominal GDP will inflate the amount the federal spends on equalization – something that Quebec flagged as the source of its rising revenue from equalization.

It is worth noting that even with the revised projections from Quebec, the province is forecasting a decline in its share of equalization payments, a not-small drop from its two-thirds share in 2019-20 to just over half of the total, four years hence.

That does reflect, in part, the progress the province is making on Mr. Legault’s vision. But it will take many more years of above-average growth to close a prosperity gap that has been decades in the making, Mr. Hogue says.

Taxing questions

Responding to a recent Tax and Spend on the jump in payroll taxes in 2022, one commenter contended that Canada Pension Plan contributions aren’t a payroll tax at all, but just a forced savings plan.

That claim has some merit, at least from a worker’s point of view. CPP contributions don’t vanish into the government’s general revenue, and do heavily influence the eventual pension benefits received.

But as the Fraser Institute wrote when the Liberals first put in motion the plan for higher contribution rates, the CPP has some very tax-like characteristics. Chief among them: It’s a government-imposed obligation. You cannot decide to invest your money elsewhere, or simply spend it.

And the CPP is not a personal savings plan. You do not have a CPP savings account. What you have is a non-binding promise by the federal government to pay you a certain amount in the future – a promise that is subject to revision. The Fraser Institute noted that Ottawa has previously boosted contribution rates without increases to benefits several times in the past. Or, you could turn that around to say that Ottawa cut benefits relative to contributions.

Either way, it’s clear the CPP is much more akin to a tax for workers than a personal savings plan. And for employers, it’s quite clearly a tax.

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Equalize you, equalize me: Speaking of equalization, the Institute on Municipal Finance and Governance has published a new paper as part of its Urban Project, arguing provinces should fully get into the equalization game – but as the entities paying out funds to municipalities. The authors acknowledge there would be a myriad of complexities to work out but that a province-to-municipality equalization program “... is an essential element of a fair and efficient system of local public finance.”

Follow me on Twitter, @PatrickBrethour or ask your Taxing Question here.

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Why Quebec has Canada's hottest economy – and growing equalization payments - The Globe and Mail
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Quebec to spend more, cuts its deficit as economy rebounds - RBC Thought Leadership -

Highlights:

  • Provincial government slashes this year’s projected deficit by nearly half to $6.8 billion
  • Stronger-than-anticipated economy and additional federal transfers boosts revenue forecast by $8.5 billion (6.9%)
  • Finance minister announces $10.7 billion in new spending measures over five years, including $1.7 billion in 2021-22
  • Brighter GDP and fiscal outlook materially improve the province’s indebtedness picture
  • Net debt-to-GDP ratio is set to return to its pre-pandemic level (39.9%) this year after hitting a lower-than-expected peak of 42.4% last fiscal year


Three cheers for the strong economic recovery

The mood was definitely upbeat when Quebec Finance Minister Éric Girard delivered the 2021 budget update on November 25. While the province still battles the pandemic—with the number of cases even rising in recent days—the good news on the economic front was something to cheer about. The recovery is far exceeding expectations. So much so that the Quebec government has upped its 2021 growth forecast to a whopping 6.5%. Better yet, the spike in inflation is contributing to a 10.8% projected surge in nominal GDP (which more closely drives provincial revenues), or nearly 5 percentage points stronger than anticipated in the 2021 budget in March.

Revenues are flowing in

Needless to say, revenues are flowing in—a phenomenon also seen in other provinces. Minister Girard revised up the government’s own-source revenues by a massive $5.9 billion (6.2%). Throw in the additional $2.6 billion (an increase of 9.5%) in federal transfers committed since Budget 2021 and suddenly Quebec has an unexpected $8.5 billion revenue windfall to cheer about.

Announcing $10.7 billion in new spending

Some of this windfall won’t stay in the province’s coffers long. Minister Girard announced the government will be spending an additional $10.7 billion over five years to help Quebecers cope with the rising cost of living, address the labour shortage, assist young families with daycare costs and strengthen Quebec’s health system. Of this amount, $1.7 billion will be spent this fiscal year.



Slashing the deficit projection this year…

Still, the windfall will drive down the provincial deficit. The government slashed its projected deficit this year by nearly half to $6.8 billion. This is after a $3.3-billion deposit to the Generations Fund. It will follow a downwardly revised $7.5-billion shortfall in 2020-21—which, before the release of the public accounts hours earlier, was estimated at $10 billion (and $15 billion at the time of the 2021 budget).

…and through the medium term

It doesn’t end there because the government has also upgraded its revenue profile through the remainder of the five-year fiscal plan. With consolidated revenues now running between 5.5% and nearly 6% above the previous baseline, Quebec will be able to accommodate additional spending and further reduce its deficit at the same time. The deficit is now projected to fall to $5.5 billion in 2022-23 (from $8.5 billion previously) and $4.0 billion thereafter. The government says this $4.0 billion is its new estimated structural deficit, down from $6 billion previously. This means additional measures on either (or both) sides of the ledger will be necessary to balance the books over the longer term. The government reiterated its commitment to balance its budget by 2027-28 (or 2024-25 if deposits to the Generations Fund are excluded).



Indebtedness picture vastly improves

Yet perhaps the bigger reason to cheer is the stark improvement in Quebec’s indebtedness picture. Smaller deficits, stronger economic growth and hotter inflation will significantly improve the profile of the province’s net debt-to-GDP ratio. That ratio rose much less than expected in 2020-21 (to 42.2% instead of 45.0% as previously projected), and will slide down to pre-pandemic levels (39.9%) this fiscal year and still lower the following year (to 38.6%). Moreover, the Quebec government expects its interest bite (debt service costs as a share of revenue) to barely budge in the coming years. The speedy return to a pre-covid position would be an astonishing turn of events if realized. The pandemic had raised serious concerns that Quebec, other provinces and the federal government would be saddled with huge debt loads possibly taking a decade or more to trim back. Those concerns now look misplaced for Quebec. The province is in fact back on track to achieve some of its longer-term debt reduction targets. Those targets were instated more than a decade ago to curb Quebec’s heavy debt load—still among the heaviest in Canada.



Financing program trimmed back modestly

The government has revised down this year’s financing program by $3.9 billion to $24.5 billion. As of November 9, it had realized 67% ($16.5 billion) of its plan. The program will total $30.9 billion in 2022-23, and average $31.7 billion in the following three years.



Robert Hogue is a member of the Macroeconomic and Regional Analysis Group, with RBC Economics. He is responsible for providing analysis and forecasts for the Canadian housing market and for the provincial economies. His publications include Housing Trends and Affordability, Provincial Outlook and provincial budget commentaries.

This article is intended as general information only and is not to be relied upon as constituting legal, financial or other professional advice. A professional advisor should be consulted regarding your specific situation. Information presented is believed to be factual and up-to-date but we do not guarantee its accuracy and it should not be regarded as a complete analysis of the subjects discussed. All expressions of opinion reflect the judgment of the authors as of the date of publication and are subject to change. No endorsement of any third parties or their advice, opinions, information, products or services is expressly given or implied by Royal Bank of Canada or any of its affiliates.

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Quebec to spend more, cuts its deficit as economy rebounds - RBC Thought Leadership -
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Sunday, November 28, 2021

China's Economy Likely Remained Weak as Factories Slump - Financial Post

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(Bloomberg) — China’s manufacturing activity likely remained subdued in November, with weak domestic demand in the economy outweighing any relief that came from an easing in energy shortages.

The official manufacturing purchasing managers’ index is forecast to improve slightly to 49.7 from 49.2 in October when it’s released Tuesday, according to the median estimate in a Bloomberg survey of economists. That would be the third month it stays below the key 50-mark, indicating a contraction in production. 

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The non-manufacturing gauge, which measures activity in the construction and services sectors, is forecast to fall to 51.5 from 52.4 in the previous month. 

China’s energy shortages, which ravaged factory production in September and October, likely eased this month as coal producers boosted output and inventories rose. However, the housing market crisis shows no signs of ending, and frequent Covid-19 outbreaks continue to curb consumption.

“Supply-side restrictions have improved marginally, so production likely rebounded somewhat,” said Xing Zhaopeng, senior China strategist at Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd. But there’s “not much positive signal on domestic demand,” which continued to weigh on activities, he said.

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Economic growth is forecast to slow to 5.3% next year, according to a Bloomberg survey median, with some economists seeing expansion as low as 4%. Bloomberg Economics forecast growth will come in at 5.7%, as the government will likely target a 5-6% range.

What Bloomberg Economics Says…

“In 2021, policy played a secondary role in setting the growth trajectory. In 2022, it will be pivotal. The extent of the slowdown will hinge largely on what balance China strikes between supporting short-term growth and advancing long-term reforms.

…We see the People’s Bank of China cutting the interest rate on its one-year medium-term lending facility by 20 basis points and the reserve requirement ratio by 100-150 bps by end-2022.”

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— Chang Shu and David Qu

For the rull report, click here

Authorities are trying to moderate the sharp downturn in the property market, while providing targeted support to areas such as small businesses and green technology. Officials will reveal more clues on how much policy easing they plan to provide during two key political meetings in December by the Politburo and the Central Economic Work Conference.

China will adopt a more proactive macroeconomic policy next year to respond to the challenges from an uneven recovery of the global economy and instability in containing the pandemic, the Securities Times, run by the People’s Daily, said in a front-page commentary Monday. 

Authorities have exercised restraint in using monetary and fiscal tools amid an economic slowdown this year, thus creating sufficient space for policy maneuvering next year, according to the commentary.

The slowdown is being cushioned by strong export demand, which likely remained solid in November, judging by latest shipment figures from South Korea.

Consumption and travel continues to be affected by a resurgence in virus cases and the country’s growing determination to stick to its strict Covid Zero strategy. Subway passenger traffic in six major cities of China declined less than 10% in November from October, though the plunge is smaller than that over the August outbreak, according to Xing. 

©2021 Bloomberg L.P.

Bloomberg.com

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Postmedia is committed to maintaining a lively but civil forum for discussion and encourage all readers to share their views on our articles. Comments may take up to an hour for moderation before appearing on the site. We ask you to keep your comments relevant and respectful. We have enabled email notifications—you will now receive an email if you receive a reply to your comment, there is an update to a comment thread you follow or if a user you follow comments. Visit our Community Guidelines for more information and details on how to adjust your email settings.

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China's Economy Likely Remained Weak as Factories Slump - Financial Post
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CNY USD: Yuan Rally Tested as China’s Economic Pain to Offset Fed Boost - Bloomberg

[unable to retrieve full-text content] CNY USD: Yuan Rally Tested as China’s Economic Pain to Offset Fed Boost    Bloomberg CNY USD: Yuan ...