Low oil prices normally help grease the wheels of business and spur global economic growth, but Moody’s yesterday said it would not revise its forecasts for G20 nations, citing a variety of offsets to the expected windfalls.
“For the G20 economies, we expect GDP growth of just under 3 percent each year in 2015 and 2016, unchanged from 2014 and from our November 2014 Global Macro Outlook,” the credit ratings agency said in its latest outlook report.
“In the euro area, Japan and Brazil, and some other net oil importers in the G20, the fall in oil prices takes place in an unfavorable economic environment,” Moody’s senior vice president for credit policy Marie Diron said.
She pointed to high unemployment and new political uncertainty in some eurozone countries, and to Brazil’s tightened monetary and fiscal policy.
“In this context, a large part of the income gains from lower oil prices is likely to be saved rather than spent,” Diron wrote.
The G20 includes the leading industrialized and developing nations.
Moody’s forecasts GDP growth of less than 1 percent this year in the eurozone and Japan.
The US and India “are among the main beneficiaries [among G20 nations] from cheaper oil as consumers and companies spend part of the gains in real income,” Moody’s said.
The US-based agency forecasts US GDP growth of 3.2 percent this year and 2.8 percent next year, while it expects India’s economy to grow by nearly 7 percent next year.
As for oil-producing G20 economies, the price slump will hit Russia hard, worsening the effects of “a pre-existing downward trend in the economy’s potential and the geopolitical crisis” surrounding Moscow’s role in the Ukraine crisis, Diron said, predicting a “sharp recession” lasting until 2017.
“In Saudi Arabia, higher fiscal spending will mitigate the negative effects of lower oil prices and help to maintain positive growth,” she said.
The forecasts are based on an assumption that oil prices will stay at an average of US$55 a barrel for Brent this year.
Moody’s conclusions followed a warning on Tuesday by the International Energy Agency, which said that the net impact of low oil prices “will be more modest than might be expected” because of a lingering hangover from the global economic crisis in 2008 and weak investment.
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