The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) yesterday raised its global economic growth forecast this year, driven by strong performances in the US and emerging countries while Europe lags behind.
The world economy is expected to expand by 3.1 percent this year, up from a previous projection in February of 2.9 percent, the OECD said.
"Cautious optimism has begun to take hold in the global economy, despite modest growth and the persistent shadow of geopolitical risks," OECD chief economist Clare Lombardelli said in the quarterly report.
Photo: EPA-EFE
But Lombardelli noted that "this recovery is unfolding differently across regions."
The US economy — the world’s biggest — is now expected to expand 2.6 percent this year, up from the 2.1 percent previously expected, and faster than last year’s 2.5 percent.
The OECD also raised its forecast for the second biggest economy, China, to 4.9 percent from 4.7 percent previously, thanks notably to an expansionary budgetary policy.
But the OECD expects timid growth of 0.7 percent in the eurozone, slightly better than the 0.6 percent previously expected. It anticipates a slight recovery to 1.5 percent next year, compared to the 1.3 percent expected in February, thanks to a recovery in domestic demand.
"The global economy has proved resilient, inflation has declined within sight of central bank targets, and risks to the outlook are becoming more balanced," OECD Secretary-General Mathias Cormann said.
The US Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank have frozen their rates and markets are hoping to see cuts in the coming months as inflation has eased.
But the Fed is expected to make its cuts later than previously thought due to the resilience of the US economy and an uptick in consumer prices.
The US central bank held its interest rate at a 23-year high on Wednesday, with Fed chairman Jerome Powell saying that it will "take longer than previously expected" to have confidence that inflation is on track to meet the institution’s two-percent target.
The OECD warned that "high geopolitical tensions, particularly in the Middle East, could disrupt energy and financial markets, causing inflation to spike and growth to falter."
"Policy action needs to ensure macroeconomic stability and improve medium-term growth prospects," Cormann said.
"Monetary policy should remain prudent, with scope to lower policy interest rates as inflation declines," he said.
He added that "fiscal policy needs to address rising pressures to debt sustainability, and policy reforms should boost innovation, investment and opportunities in the labour market particularly for women, young people and older workers."
The OECD report said a recovery in household incomes, tight labour markets and the expected interest rate cuts will help to "generate a gradual rebound."
But it warned that "the mixed macroeconomic landscape is expected to persist, with inflation and interest rates declining at differing paces, and differing needs for fiscal consolidation."
The OECD cut this year’s growth forecast for Germany, Europe’s largest economy, to 0.2 percent from 0.3 percent previously. France, the eurozone’s second biggest economy, is expected to post 0.7 percent growth, up from 0.6 percent in a previous forecast, lifted by consumer spending.
In Britain, the economy is seen growing 0.4 percent this year and 1.0 percent next year, slower than what was expected in February, which the OECD blamed on persistent inflation.
Six Taiwanese companies, including contract chipmaker Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TSMC), made the 2025 Fortune Global 500 list of the world’s largest firms by revenue. In a report published by New York-based Fortune magazine on Tuesday, Hon Hai Precision Industry Co. (better known as Foxconn) ranked highest among Taiwanese firms, placing 28th with revenue of US$213.69 billion. Up 60 spots from last year, TSMC rose 60 places to reach No. 126 with US$90.16 billion in revenue, followed by Quanta Computer Inc. at 348th, Pegatron Corp. at 461st, CPC Corp., Taiwan at 494th and Wistron Corp. at 496th. According to Fortune, the world’s
NEW PRODUCTS: MediaTek plans to roll out new products this quarter, including a flagship mobile phone chip and a GB10 chip that it is codeveloping with Nvidia Corp MediaTek Inc (聯發科) yesterday projected that revenue this quarter would dip by 7 to 13 percent to between NT$130.1 billion and NT$140 billion (US$4.38 billion and US$4.71 billion), compared with NT$150.37 billion last quarter, which it attributed to subdued front-loading demand and unfavorable foreign exchange rates. The Hsinchu-based chip designer said that the forecast factored in the negative effects of an estimated 6 percent appreciation of the New Taiwan dollar against the greenback. “As some demand has been pulled into the first half of the year and resulted in a different quarterly pattern, we expect the third quarter revenue to decline sequentially,”
WEAKER ACTIVITY: The sharpest deterioration was seen in the electronics and optical components sector, with the production index falling 13.2 points to 44.5 Taiwan’s manufacturing sector last month contracted for a second consecutive month, with the purchasing managers’ index (PMI) slipping to 48, reflecting ongoing caution over trade uncertainties, the Chung-Hua Institution for Economic Research (CIER, 中華經濟研究院) said yesterday. The decline reflects growing caution among companies amid uncertainty surrounding US tariffs, semiconductor duties and automotive import levies, and it is also likely linked to fading front-loading activity, CIER president Lien Hsien-ming (連賢明) said. “Some clients have started shifting orders to Southeast Asian countries where tariff regimes are already clear,” Lien told a news conference. Firms across the supply chain are also lowering stock levels to mitigate
DIVERSIFYING: Taiwanese investors are reassessing their preference for US dollar assets and moving toward Europe amid a global shift away from the greenback Taiwanese investors are reassessing their long-held preference for US-dollar assets, shifting their bets to Europe in the latest move by global investors away from the greenback. Taiwanese funds holding European assets have seen an influx of investments recently, pushing their combined value to NT$13.7 billion (US$461 million) as of the end of last month, the highest since 2019, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Over the first half of this year, Taiwanese investors have also poured NT$14.1 billion into Europe-focused funds based overseas, bringing total assets up to NT$134.8 billion, according to data from the Securities Investment Trust and Consulting Association (SITCA),