Europe faces another year of dismal economic performance next year that will weigh on global growth, but emerging markets and the US should at least keep the world economy moving in the right direction.
There are several reasons why next year may be nothing to look forward to, according to Reuters polls from the past few months.
Many of the biggest developed economies are heading into recession, global stock markets look set to recoup only a fraction of this year’s heavy losses, oil prices will fall and asset managers are unsure where best to invest — and these could be the best-case scenarios.
Most economists base their assumptions on the hope that the eurozone’s debt crisis will not boil over into a new global economic crisis, having already dented growth in major exporters to Europe.
Still, most of the major emerging market economies like Brazil and China should pick up speed later next year. All of them have suffered from slowing economies in recent months, caused mainly by tightening monetary policy in the face of high inflation.
“It’s important to stress the world economy is still growing. But it’s a tale of two worlds,” said Gerard Lyons, chief economist at Standard Chartered Bank. “The storyline for 2012 is that Europe drags the world down in the first half of the year, and China drags it up in the second half of the year.”
Enormous political risks cloud the outlook further, with elections and leadership changes in the most powerful countries and the prospect of continuing turmoil in the Middle East.
Still, there are glimmers of hope. The US economy has performed better than most had hoped over the past quarter and Reuters’ polls of economists show it growing about 2.2 percent next year, compared with zero growth in the eurozone.
“The big unknown in Europe and the US is that big companies, with balance sheets in good shape, have the ability to invest at home if they want. It’s more likely that will take place in the US rather than Europe,” Lyons said.
EU leaders took a historic step toward greater fiscal integration earlier this month, but economists have been clear this would not ease a debt crisis entering its third year and still hogging the headlines.
Reuters polls show real concern that leaders are doing far too little to stimulate growth, with the likes of Spain and Italy destined for long and painful recessions.
The eurozone as a whole, meanwhile, is probably in a moderate recession right now that will last midway into next year.
“The euro area continues to be a source of economic and financial instability for the rest of the world,” Juan Perez-Campanero, economist at Santander, said in a research note. “We could be facing a more permanent and lasting decline in growth capacity in developed economies and, particularly, the euro area.”
Whether Spain and Italy will need to seek funding from the eurozone’s bailout facility next year is open to question, with a very slim majority of economists polled this month — 27 out of 56 — saying not.
A survey last month of 20 top economists and former policymakers in academia and respected research institutes showed 14 of them do not expect the eurozone to survive in its current form.
Even in Japan, where economists have downgraded growth forecasts relentlessly, the economy is expected to pick up in the fiscal year from April and expand 1.8 percent. Japan should narrowly avoid a recession, but polls show little hope it will emerge from deflation any time soon.
The severe uncertainty surrounding next year is perhaps best reflected by Reuters’ asset allocation poll of more than 50 leading investment houses in the US, Europe and Japan.
Investors raised their cash balance to the highest in a year this month as they prepared for a jittery coming year, although they also moved back into cheap equities, Reuters polls showed last Monday.
The eurozone crisis was the key concern of asset managers polled, hence the increased preference for cash, as well as moves into British and Asian shares rather than European ones.
The last quarterly stock markets poll suggested emerging markets will easily outperform European share indexes next year, which will struggle to bounce back to end-2010 levels, never mind end-2011.
With Europe heading into a recession, oil prices look set to fall from here. Brent crude will average US$105 a barrel next year, not far below this year’s record-high average of near US$111.
“We expect a mild recession across the OECD [Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development] next year to put a damper on demand and consequently prices,” David Wech from Vienna-based consultants JBC Energy said. “Nevertheless, the risk to oil prices is definitely on the upside given a still troubled geopolitical environment.”
Economic growth is likely to slow among the Gulf’s wealthy oil exporters next year, but governments will remain able to spend to counter the impact of any global slump, a Reuters poll showed on Wednesday.
Respondents cited the eurozone debt crisis and signs of slowing growth in China as reasons for the darkened economic outlook in the Gulf.
Whatever the eurozone’s future, the effects of the debt crisis have already been felt across the world. The EU is China’s biggest export market and manufacturing data there show dwindling levels of foreign new orders.
Indeed, the Chinese economy is now growing at its weakest pace since 2009. In an effort to support it the central bank cut reserve requirements at the end of last month for the first time in three years.
Economists polled by Reuters after this move, however, said the People’s Bank of China will refrain from more aggressive stimulative policies unless growth falls sharply to below 8 percent.
Similarly, India has been suffering from a pronounced slowdown in growth and Reuters polls suggest its central bank will also slacken monetary policy by the middle of next year to counter this, despite stubbornly high inflation. It could be in for a difficult year.
“Looking ahead, the economy faces the lagged effects of monetary tightening,” said Leif Eskesen, an HSBC economist in Singapore. “Moreover, administrative hurdles and domestic policy paralysis are holding back investments and hurting sentiment.”
Brazil’s central bank on Thursday cut this year’s growth estimate to 3 percent, from its previous estimate of 3.5 percent, and said next year would see growth of 3.5 percent.
Compared with previous years where growth averaged near double--digit rates, that would be a disappointment, although still a fair improvement on the anaemic rates of most developed peers.
Overall, even the slightly depressed growth rates from these developing economic powers will power world growth next year.
“It is positive growth, but the picture does vary considerably — not just in terms of the first and second half of the year, but also depending on which part of the world you look at,” Lyons said.
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