UNUnited Nations Economic Commission for Europe

Press Release

[Index]      

Geneva, 31 July 2002

THE ECE ECONOMIES AT MID-2002: AN UPDATE*

This note updates a previous analysis of the economic situation in the UNECE region published in the Economic Survey of Europe in May 2002.

1. The global context

A slowing recovery and more uncertain short-term prospects.

Economic activity in the world economy picked up in the first quarter of 2002, largely stimulated by a marked swing in inventory adjustment in the United States. This provided a stimulus to economic activity, via the foreign trade channel, notably in Japan and Asian emerging markets but also in western Europe. But this impulse from inventory investment weakened in the second quarter and had little, if any, positive spill-over effects on final demand, either in the United States or in the other major regions of the world economy. The failure of the United States' economy, the locomotive of global growth from 1995 to 2000, to gain cyclical momentum in the second quarter, weakened confidence in a sustained recovery and brought back into focus the huge external and domestic imbalances in the US economy and the associated downside risks for the short-term economic outlook.1

In the United States, the strong cyclical momentum witnessed in the first quarter of 2002 was not maintained in the second quarter. Available indicators suggest that economic activity continued to expand at a more moderate rate.2 This largely reflects a smaller contribution to growth from inventory investment and a further slowdown in the rate of expansion of personal consumption. Consumer confidence has been volatile since March 2002; it fell in June against the background of continuing weak demand for labour, waning confidence in corporate sector accounting practices and declining shares prices. Business fixed investment continues to be restrained by ample margins of spare capacity and weak sales and earnings prospects. In addition, firms are facing a high level of indebtedness.

However, sluggish retail sales, weak labour market conditions and the steady, albeit moderate expansion of manufacturing output stand in sharp contrast to robust residential real estate markets. Composite leading indicators for the economy have been fluctuating from month to month, but the overall tendency is for a moderate rise. Headline inflation has declined to low levels. Unit labour costs were held in check by gains in productivity, largely due to cuts in hours worked.

As for the external balance, the current account deficit rose to a level corresponding to 4.3 per cent of GDP in the first quarter of 2002, largely reflecting development on the merchandise trade balance with imports outstripping exports inter alia because of the asymmetric strength of domestic demand in the United States and in its main trading partners. The monthly trade deficit reached a record $36 billion in April 2002. Gross capital inflows declined significantly in the first quarter of 2002, compared with the preceding quarter, largely on account of lower portfolio and bank credit inflows. Smaller gross inflows were partly offset by reduced gross capital outflows, and in sum there was a decline in net recorded inflows by one third. Net private portfolio inflows into the United States fell to $67 billion during the first quarter of 2002, from $100 billion during the previous quarter.

In the United States, disappointing corporate sales and earnings led to strong selling in equity markets, notably for high-technology stocks. These pressures were accentuated by a series of corporate financial scandals, which eroded investors' trust in profit statements and company valuations. At the end of June 2002 the Dow Jones industrial index had fallen by about 10 per cent compared with the beginning of the year and the Nasdaq index for high-technology stocks by some 30 per cent. Major European stock markets also weakened on account of a more cautious assessment of short-term economic prospects and related concerns about corporate profits. At the end of June 2002, the Euro Stoxx 50 index had declined by some 25 per cent from the beginning of January. The fall in equity markets has adverse effects on private households' direct net financial wealth and on the stream of revenues from pension funds and both will impact on spending behaviour. Lower equity prices also raise financing costs of businesses.

The combination of a slowing recovery and corporate financial scandals have eroded investors' confidence in the ability of the United States' corporate sector to continue to deliver an attractive rate of return relative to other countries. This is reflected in a progressive depreciation of the dollar since March 2002. At the end of June, the dollar was traded at close to parity against the euro, a 30-month low, and equivalent to a depreciation of some 15 per cent from its recent peak of late February 2002. Over the same period, the dollar depreciated by some 10 per cent against the yen, despite the Bank of Japan's repeated intervention in the foreign exchange market to stem the appreciation of the yen due to its concern about the price competitiveness of exports, the mainstay of Japanese economic activity in early 2002. The dollar also depreciated against other major currencies such as the pound sterling and the Swiss franc. But the real effective exchange rate of the dollar is still very high compared with the level attained in 1995.

Against this background of mounting uncertainty about the strength of the recovery, United States monetary policy has been on hold since December 2001, when the target for the federal funds rate was lowered to a forty-year low of 1¾ per cent. At its meeting on 26 June 2002, the Federal Open Market Committee confirmed its earlier assessment that the risks are balanced with respect to the prospects for price stability and sustainable economic growth. Nominal long-term interest rates (yields on 10-year treasuries) tended to fall slightly in the second quarter of 2002, probably influenced by revised expectations about growth prospects and the future stance of monetary policy.

In Canada, there was also a strong rebound in economic growth in the first quarter of 2002, reflecting increased exports to the United States and robust domestic demand. Concerns about the rekindling of inflationary pressures led the Bank of Canada to raise its overnight lending rate by 25 basis points to 2.25 per cent in mid-April.

In Japan, the economy appeared to have emerged from the deep recession of 2001, led by strengthening exports. Real GDP is estimated to have increased by an unexpected 1.4 per cent in the first quarter of 2002 (over the preceding quarter) after three consecutive quarters of decline (table 1). Nevertheless, output still remains some 1.5 per cent below its level in the first quarter of 2001. The recovery of exports was largely stimulated by the increased demand in other Asian markets and the United States and by the sizeable real effective depreciation of the yen since the autumn of 2001. In contrast, business capital expenditure fell sharply, especially in the electronics and IT related sectors. The latest Tankan survey points to improved economic sentiment among large manufacturing companies in the second quarter of 2002, but the recent appreciation of the yen could erode price competitiveness and add to the persistent deflationary pressures.

A more difficult environment for emerging markets.

Financial flows to emerging markets during the first half of 2002 slowed down markedly due to worries concerning the economic and political situation of Latin America and Turkey, which were aggravated by international investors' heightened risk aversion caused by the fall in equity markets of industrialised countries and their succession of high-profile corporate failures. 3

In South America several countries have suffered from a mutually reinforcing combination of financial market turbulence and political uncertainty. Falling prices of equities, international bonds (thereby raising international financing cost) and domestic currency, were accompanied by rising domestic interest rates. In many countries, this situation has posed heightened difficulties to the management of public finances. The economic situation of Argentina has deteriorated steadily since the country defaulted on its foreign debt and it abandoned its currency board. Output during the first quarter was 16 per cent below its corresponding level in the preceding year, leading to rising unemployment and poverty. The financial turbulence in Brazil (since May 2002) has been due to a concern about the economic policies of the prospective government and how they would affect the sustainability of its public debt. Developments in Argentina and Brazil have had a direct negative impact on the economies of Uruguay and Paraguay, of which they are the largest trade partners. Elsewhere in the region, political uncertainty and violence have jeopardised the economic situation, particularly in Venezuela, Colombia and Peru. Although Mexico had been immune to the worsening economic climate in Latin America, it suffered from mild contagion in June 2002.

In Turkey, the economy has started to recover from the deep recession of 2001. This occurred against the background of significant progress in implementing the adjustment programme agreed with the IMF. But the economic outlook has deteriorated since May, due to currency depreciation, falling equity prices and a rise in domestic interest rates and international financing costs. Moreover, the management of public finance has become more difficult. A crisis in the governing coalition and the uncertainty about the outcome of possible early elections has raised concerns about the continuation of structural reforms and of the adjustment programme; the latter is essential for continued support of the IMF. The steep depreciation of the lira is likely to impact on the country's trade, particularly that with partners in southern Europe and several CIS countries.

After a sharp fall in the final quarter of 2001 and a surge in January-April 2002, the spot price for a barrel of Brent crude settled in a range of $23 to $26. On average, crude oil prices in the second quarter of 2002 were 8 per cent below their level in the corresponding period of 2001. Price movements during the first half of 2002 reflected both the interaction of market fundamentals and changing market sentiment regarding the overall political situation in the Middle East. During the first quarter prices were supported by OPEC supply cuts introduced in January, and which more than compensated for the fall in demand brought about by the global economic slowdown and a mild winter in the Northern hemisphere.4

The pick-up in global industrial production in early 2002 and expectations that it would strengthen further pushed up the prices of most cyclically sensitive commodities. By April the prices of non-ferrous metals and agricultural raw materials had risen by 12 per cent above their low points in the last quarter of 2001. Further increases of a similar magnitude are not expected during the remainder of the year, however, as these higher price levels already appear to incorporate current expectations of the likely strength of economic activity in the rest of 2002.

2. Western Europe

Weak domestic demand holds back economic growth and export prospects have deteriorated.

In western Europe, economic activity improved in the first quarter of 2002, following a small decline in real GDP in the final quarter of 2001. Domestic demand remained sluggish and an increase in real net exports provided the sole support to overall economic activity. In contrast to the United States, inventory investment continued to fall and subtract from economic growth. Economic activity continued to expand in the second quarter of 2002, but at a moderate rate. The global slowdown in 2001 has significantly reduced the differences in rates of economic growth among the various west European countries.

In the euro area, revised quarterly national accounts data show a somewhat more pronounced cyclical slowdown in 2001 than previously estimated. Real GDP virtually stagnated in the second and third quarters of 2001 and fell by 0.3 per cent in the final quarter (table 1). During the first quarter of 2002 real GDP recovered somewhat, but preliminary estimates point to only a modest increase of 0.2 per cent over the final quarter of 2001. Both private consumption and fixed investment declined slightly in the first quarter of 2002, and further cuts in business inventories also dampened economic growth.

Short-term economic indicators point to only moderate growth in the euro area in the second quarter of 2002. The upward tendency of industrial output in early 2002 was reversed in April, when there was a decline of 0.5 per cent compared with March. Industrial confidence fell in June against the background of falling orders and higher stocks of finished products. Industrial investment surveys show firms cutting their planned expenditures for 2002 compared with their intentions in the autumn of 2001.5 Capacity utilisation rates in the manufacturing sector fell in April 2002. Retail sales (volumes) have been sluggish during the first four months of 2002: in April they fell by 0.6 per cent and were only 0.1 per cent higher than their level in the same month of 2001. Consumer confidence also weakened in June 2002 although it was still somewhat stronger than it was at the beginning of the year. Preliminary estimates show that headline inflation fell from 2 per cent in May to 1.7 per cent in June. Against the background of weak economic activity, the unemployment rate was 8.3 per cent in April and May, only slightly higher than at the beginning of the year. Concerns about the lack of cyclical momentum in the euro area, where accentuated by recent short-term indicators for Germany, showing a fall in the ifo business climate index and an unexpected increase in unemployment in June as well as a decline in industrial output in May.

Against the backdrop of prospects for only relatively moderate economic expansion, inflation falling below the 2 per cent ceiling of the ECB's inflation target and the sizeable appreciation of the euro against the dollar, the ECB decided to leave its key interest rates unchanged in early July 2002. The main refinancing rate has been at 3¼ per cent since November 2001, when it was lowered by half a percentage point. Monetary conditions tightened somewhat as a result of the effective appreciation of the euro against other major currencies in the second quarter of 2002. The rate of growth of money supply (M3) remained significantly above its reference value of 4.5 per cent in the first half of 2002; this continues to reflect portfolio shifts towards M3-assets in the face of overall uncertainty about the short-term economic outlook. As in the United States, long-term interest rates tended to fall slightly in June, and there was only a slight yield gap in favour of euro-denominated assets.

Outside the euro area, real GDP in the United Kingdom stagnated in the first quarter of 2002, as it had done in the previous quarter. Real GDP was only 1 per cent higher than a year earlier. The recent marked depreciation of the pound sterling against the euro should help to ease the trade deficit by stimulating exports to the euro area, which accounts for around half of the United Kingdom's external trade. A prime policy concern is the rise in the ratio of consumer debt to income to very high levels, which is fuelling domestic demand. This development is closely related to the accelerating rate of house price inflation in the United Kingdom. To arrest this unsustainable tendency and to avoid rekindling inflationary pressures, the Monetary Policy Committee of the Bank of England is widely expected to raise interest rates during the course of 2002 in order to bring about the necessary moderation in consumer demand.

3. The transition economies

Widespread deceleration of growth due to weak foreign demand

Most transition economies continued to expand in the first half of 2002 but the rate of growth has decelerated sharply throughout the region. The signs of weakening were most visible in eastern Europe where rates of GDP growth in a number of economies were considerably below those of 2001. Thus, aggregate GDP in eastern Europe in the first quarter of 2002 rose by just 2.0 per cent year-on-year (table 3); growth also decelerated in the Baltic states and in the Commonwealth of Independent States although the average rates in these two regions remained relatively high at 4.1 per cent.

The changes in aggregate output in the transition economies were dominated by the unfavourable external environment and, specifically, by the weakening of import demand in Western Europe. The average performance was also influenced by low or waning growth in the two largest economies in the region, Poland and Russia. Consequently, the downward trend in aggregate economic activity, that was already under way in many transition economies during 2001, persisted in the first quarter of 2002. Due to the deterioration in international trade, the weakening of industrial output was even more pronounced than that of GDP (table 3).

As was the case in 2001, the negative impact of weaker external demand was partly offset by domestic demand (especially private consumption). The generally strong recovery of personal consumption was partly due to a lagged real income effect of the previous phase of strong export-led growth throughout the region. At the same time, the changes in investment were more heterogeneous in this period: there was no uniform pattern in eastern Europe and the Baltic states, while investment decelerated throughout the CIS. In Russia, real fixed investment outlays in January-May 2002 increased by just 1.7 per cent, year-on-year, while the corresponding figure for the same period of 2001 was 7.4 per cent. In some countries fiscal policy has been used to offset waning external demand, especially when elections were in prospect. 6Too heavy a reliance on fiscal stimuli, however, might endanger the internal and external balance of these very open economies before an export-led recovery is able to set in again.

Due to weaker foreign demand, especially in western Europe, the year-on-year rates of growth of industrial output during the first quarter of 2002 were substantially lower than they were in 2001 in virtually all the east European and Baltic economies (table 3). The most affected were the economies of south-east Europe and the heavily trade-dependent Baltic economies, after their very strong performance in 2001: during the first three months of 2002 industrial output even declined in Estonia, Latvia, Bulgaria, The former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, and Yugoslavia, but also in Poland.

Growth in the CIS economies in the first quarter of 2002 was significantly weaker than in 2001 as a whole and in comparison with the final quarter. At the same time the differences between countries increased: most first quarter GDP growth rates were between 3 and 5 per cent (table 3) but the range was from more than 10 per cent (for the oil and gas producing Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan) to -2.3 per cent for Kyrgyzstan, which suffered from a significant decline in gold extraction.7 Total industrial output in the CIS grew by about 3 per cent in the first three months of 2002, less than half its annual rate in 2001. Russian industry slowed to a year-on-year growth rate of 2.6 per cent in the first quarter of 2002, one of the lowest in the CIS. Although the ongoing reforms are expected to bear fruit in the medium and long term,8 if output continues to weaken in the short run, Russia's capacity to serve as the region's growth engine will be reduced.

Inflation continues to moderate

The downward trend in consumer price inflation, which generally resumed in the transition economies in early 2001, continued in the first half of 2002. Food and domestic fuel prices were the main factors behind this favourable performance, particularly in the second quarter when disinflation gained momentum. The real appreciation (in some cases significant) of exchange rates which alleviated external supply-side cost pressures also contributed to the generally lower rates of inflation. Due to transmission lags, the effect of the rising world commodity prices (which have been recovering from the lows of the last quarter of 2001) has not yet fed through into domestic prices.

In many of the east European economies for which such data are available, the rates of core inflation (CPI excluding food and energy prices), however, remained rather stable in this period; the rate fell only in Poland, largely due to the lagged effects of a long period of tight monetary policy and a strong zloty. Inflation rates changed little in Bulgaria, Slovenia, Belarus and Russia.

On the domestic side, wage inflation remained strong and rose much faster than measured labour productivity in industry, particularly in those countries where the slowdown in industrial output was accentuated by declining foreign demand. Consequently, with few exceptions, unit labour costs continued to rise in the first half of 2002. The significant fall in industrial producer price inflation in most of the transition economies suggests that a considerable part of the rising labour cost pressure has been absorbed by unit operating profits.

A tense situation in the labour markets

The available data on registered unemployment suggest that the weakening of economic activity was accompanied by a further deterioration of the labour markets in a number of east European economies in the first months of 2002. Many of these countries continue to face high and persistent levels of unemployment, which constitutes a serious challenge for economic policy. In some economies, the social consequences of weak labour markets are further exacerbated by the continuing rise in the number of long-term jobless people who are no longer eligible for unemployment benefits. The situation, however, differs considerably among countries and sub-regions.

In central Europe, Hungary is the only country where the unemployment rate declined in the 12 months to April 2002. In Slovakia and Slovenia, it remained at the same level as a year ago, and increased in the Czech Republic and Poland. In Poland, sluggish economic growth combined with the restructuring of unprofitable industries and the arrival of newcomers to the labour market, led to a sharp rise in joblessness. The unemployment rate hit a post-communist record high of just over 18 per cent of the labour force in March, two percentage points higher than a year earlier and the largest increase among all the transition economies. There was also a further deterioration in the labour markets of the south-east European transition economies. The average unemployment rate in this region was 18.3 per cent in April, nearly one percentage point more than a year earlier. In the 12 months to April, unemployment increased in all countries of the region except Albania and Bulgaria.

Developments were more encouraging in the Baltic states and in the CIS region. During the first months of 2002, the unemployment rate was broadly unchanged (measured on a year-on-year basis) in Latvia, and it declined in Estonia and Lithuania. In both countries the decline was the first since 1998 when unemployment surged as a result of the Russian financial crisis and then increased further due to enterprise restructuring. Estimates of unemployment based on data from labour force surveys indicate further improvements in the three largest economies in the CIS. In the first quarter of 2002, the unemployment rates in Russia, Kazakhstan and Ukraine were lower than those in the final quarter of the previous year and some 1-2 percentage points lower than a year earlier.

Weaker trade performance

The foreign trade of the transition economies continued to weaken in the first quarter of 2002 (table 4), the decline in current dollar terms reflecting the global economic slowdown and falls in the dollar prices of traded goods. In the east European and Baltic countries, the stagnation of trade volumes - there was no increase in the volume of aggregate exports and aggregate imports increased by just 2 per cent - reflects the delayed impact of the economic slowdown in western Europe.9 In recent years improving competitiveness has buoyed the exports of many of these countries, although in many cases domestic currencies have appreciated steadily (in both nominal and real effective terms) and several countries have experienced a recent rise in unit labour costs. The terms of trade of many countries improved in January-March as import unit values (in dollars) declined more than export unit values, due mainly to the year-on-year fall in international market prices for energy and other raw materials. This helped to reduce the merchandise trade deficit of the region as a whole by nearly $500 million from the level in January-March 2001. However, the changes in the aggregate trade and current account balances mask considerable differences among countries which also reflect variations in the strength of local demand and in the stance of macroeconomic policies.

In January-March 2002, the dollar value of east European and Baltic exports and imports to and from the EU both declined by some 3 per cent. Exports to the EU fell in eleven of the 15 countries, the most affected being Estonia because of its dependence on ICT sales. The export downturn in Hungary, Poland, Slovakia and Slovenia was also quite pronounced in the first two months of the year. Later (in March and April), however, this downward trend subsided noticeably. Aggregate exports to Russia and other CIS countries rose some 11 per cent in dollar value, while those within eastern Europe and the Baltic region shrank by 4-5 per cent.

Except for a few countries, imports into eastern Europe and the Baltic states have also fallen since the beginning of the year reflecting lower (year-on-year) world commodity prices and faltering input demand by manufacturing industry. Imports of new machinery were sluggish as investment was somewhat subdued in most of the region, but in some countries buoyant private consumption boosted the imports of motor vehicles for private use and of manufactured consumer goods.

The dollar value of the CIS countries' aggregate exports fell by 10 per cent in the first quarter of 2002, largely because of the lower export prices for primary commodities (except gold which rose by 7 per cent). Crude oil prices in this period were by 20 per cent lower than a year earlier, gasoline prices fell by almost a third while the average price of Russia's natural gas decreased by an estimated 20 per cent. The price of cotton - a major export commodity in Central Asia - was down almost 40 per cent year-on-year while prices for base metals such as aluminium, copper and nickel were lower by some 5 to 13 per cent.

The value of Russian exports declined by 14 per cent year-on-year in the first quarter of 2002, despite increased shipments of crude oil and oil products (by 16 and 10 per cent, respectively). However, the volume of natural gas exports fell by 2 per cent. Similarly, the value of exports from many other CIS countries also declined, the falls ranging between 1 per cent in gold-producing Kyrgyzstan to 14 per cent in Azerbaijan whose exports are dominated by crude oil. Strong output growth in the CIS region led to an increase in the value of aggregate CIS imports by 4 per cent in the first three months of 2002. This growth largely reflected greater demand in Russia where the value of imports was up by 7 per cent on the strength of a 20 per cent increase in imports of machinery and equipment. Only in Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan was there a significant fall in total imports.

Selective widening of current account deficits

At the beginning of 2002, it was expected that there would be at least a temporary deterioration in the current account balances of eastern Europe and the Baltic states, due to the lagged effect on exports of the global and west European slowdown. As noted above, the growth of merchandise exports indeed weakened, and this was also true of services (which had provided a significant boost to export revenues in 2001). Data for the first quarter of 2002 indicate that on average the current account deficits of this group of countries remained little changed from a year earlier (table 5). In 2001 more than half of these countries had posted large external deficits, and in several cases these worsened in the first quarter of 2002. However, Bulgaria, Lithuania and Romania have managed to arrest or reverse such negative tendencies, in part through a tightening of fiscal policy. In some countries, widening current account deficits have been attributed to buoyant domestic and foreign investment, and thus have not been considered a cause for concern, although a rapid growth of investment-related imports does not necessarily translate into more dynamic exports.

In Russia, the rise in international oil prices in April and May 2002 gave a strong boost to its trade surplus and presumably halted the decline in the current account surplus. In the most other CIS countries, merchandise trade data suggest that current account balances have generally deteriorated.

Capital flows to eastern Europe remain buoyant

Current account deficits in eastern Europe and the Baltic states were, in general, easily financed in the first quarter of 2002. Various types of loans tended to boost net capital inflows, which in many cases led to overall balance of payments surpluses, thus increasing official reserves. FDI inflows tended to slow down in the first quarter of 2002 although in a few countries there were large increases. Although many east European states had no need to borrow in the international markets, those that did continued to benefit from favourable conditions. Confidence in their economies has increased due to improved macroeconomic stability and approaching EU membership, and this in turn has attracted investors shunning the emerging markets. In the first six months of 2002, eight east European entities, mostly sovereign borrowers, issued bonds worth some $5.1 billion; these include a $1.3 billion swap of Brady bonds into eurobonds by Bulgaria and two sovereign bond issues worth a total of $1.7 billion by Poland.

There have been further important improvements in the financial situation of Russia. The recent increase in the trade surplus and the reduced net outflow of capital led to a surge in official reserves (to $38.8 billion in mid-June). Falling spreads on the country's foreign debt have enabled several oil and telecommunications companies to access the eurobond market (issuing bonds worth $1.6 billion in January-June) for the first time since the rouble crisis in 1998. Indications of improving standards of corporate governance and increased transparency in some Russian companies have contributed to the resurgence of the stock market and have helped two Russian companies, Yukos and Wimm-Bill-Dann, to raise funds in the primary equity markets. This vastly improved financial situation and the current prospects for (relatively high) oil prices have further increased confidence that Russia will be able to fully meet its debt servicing obligations in the foreseeable future.

4. The short-term outlook

Western Europe and North America

Increased uncertainty and downwside risks for the second half of 2002

The first quarter of 2002 witnessed a steady upgrading of consensus forecasts for GDP growth in the United States in 2002 from 0.9 per cent in January to 2.1 in March. This more optimistic assessment of economic prospects for the United States continued in the second quarter, but revisions were more modest: in early June, the consensus forecasts had edged up to 2.7 per cent from 2.6 per cent in May. By contrast, forecasts for economic growth in the euro area in 2002 have remained stable at 1.3 per cent (table 2). A major factor behind this weak outlook is the persistent sluggishness of economic activity in Germany, where real GDP is forecast to increase by only 1 per cent. However, economic growth is expected to be only slightly higher in Italy (1.2 per cent) and France (1.4 per cent). For western Europe as a whole, real GDP is currently expected to reach 1.4 per cent in 2002, slightly up from the 1.3 per cent forecast in January 2002. Within this aggregate, an annual growth rate of 1.8 per cent is forecast for the United Kingdom. In Japan, real GDP is expected to decrease by 0.5 per cent.

These forecasts of early June, however, do not take into account the further substantial dollar depreciation in the course of that month and other adverse factors such as the slide in share prices and the fall in consumer confidence in the euro area and the United States. In general, these forecasts envisage a gradual strengthening of economic growth in the second half of the year, but the case for this has weakened. In fact, the downside risks to this already moderate outlook for growth have increased in recent weeks. It has become clear that it will take longer than expected earlier for corporate profits and investment in the United States to turn around in the face of large margins of spare capacity, a tendency for the growth of domestic private consumption to weaken, and a not very supportive external environment [and a general deterioration in confidence]. And in western Europe, the sizeable depreciation of the dollar will, with a lag, restrain growth of exports to the rest of the world. In this general context, a tightening of monetary policy in the euro area would not be adequate.

Expectations of a rapid rebound of corporate sector spending on IT products after the bursting of the high-tech bubble have not materialized; rather, there are indications of an increase in the PC upgrading cycle. Business surveys show that IT budgets have not been growing either in the United States or in western Europe in 2002. The rate of expansion of private household consumption in the United States, moreover, will eventually have to slow down in the face of a low savings rate and high levels of debt, which will have to be corrected sooner or later. Growth in the rest of the world is sluggish, largely dependent as it is on a recovery in the United States. US export growth, moreover, continues to be restrained by the still high level of the dollar exchange rate.

There are, moreover, growing concerns about the financing of the large current account deficit in view of the weakening confidence of foreign investors that the United States corporate sector will continue to be able to generate the relatively high rates of return of recent years, given the slowing recovery in the second quarter and the more uncertain short-term prospects for growth. The decline in net private portfolio flows in the first quarter of 2002 could be a first indication of this. The series of corporate financial scandals, which started with the Enron case, have only helped to reinforce this tendency.

There is a need for an expenditure switch in the United States

A significant but gradual dollar depreciation would enable United States' domestic demand to switch from spending on foreign goods to domestic goods and to bolster export growth via improved price competitiveness. Abstracting from the short-term J-curve effect, this would help to reduce the trade and current account deficits. This change in the pattern of competitiveness and the related changes in the composition of domestic absorption, however, would dampen demand for imports from the rest of the world, including western Europe. A more expansionary monetary policy in western Europe, especially in the euro area, would therefore be required to stimulate domestic demand in order to offset the effects of weaker net exports. Such a change in circumstances would likely once again test the flexibility of the fiscal rules stipulated in the Stability and Growth Pact. There have been concerns recently about expansionary fiscal measures (tax cuts) announced by some countries because they would run into conflict with the budget deficit targets stipulated in the stability programmes. The intended revision of the Growth and Stability Pact in the euro area should provide a more conducive framework for the operation of automatic stabilizers in case of a cyclical downturn by putting the focus of fiscal discipline on structural budget deficits and levels of government debt.10

The main downside risk to such a scenario would be an acceleration of the recent rate of dollar depreciation, triggered by a more abrupt withdrawal of international capital from the United States. This would be likely to be accompanied by a sharper decline in the equity markets and the consequent fall in net financial wealth would lead to a marked curb in private consumption. At the same time, a rapid and sizeable appreciation of the euro would threaten to choke off the anaemic recovery in western Europe. The open question then would be how the ECB and the Federal Reserve would react to such a sudden shift in the pattern of international capital flows. Given the risks of overshooting in the foreign exchange markets this might require a co-ordinated intervention by the major central banks. Other downside risks are associated with the likely development of the oil price in view of the uncertain political situation in the Middle East. But developments in Latin America are also a matter of concern. The deep economic and financial crisis in Argentina and the uncertainty over the outcome of the next elections in Brazil, and the related possible changes in macroeconomic policies, are reflected in an increasing aversion to risk on the part of international investors. This could have broader contagion effects in other emerging markets and limit their ability to raise external funds, although for the time being the transition economies appear to be largely unaffected by these developments.

Eastern Europe and the CIS

The transition economies as a whole remain highly susceptible to external disturbances. The impact of the deterioration in the external environment (weaker import demand from western Europe and lower commodity prices) became evident in the deceleration of growth in first quarter of the year. It is not yet quite clear whether this weakening is just a temporary or a more lasting phenomenon; much will depend on the strength of recovery in the global and west European economies and whether or not it falters in the wake of events in the United States. In any case, the slowdown that has already occurred in the first quarter is likely to have a negative impact on the average growth figures for the year as a whole. If the external conditions deteriorate further, a number of countries may face difficulties in meeting their growth targets.

The weaker than expected output in the first quarter has already prompted a lowering of forecasts in a number of transition economies. In eastern Europe, official forecasts of GDP growth in 2002 have been lowered in Albania, the Czech Republic, Hungary and Romania. Within the CIS region some forecasts for 2002 have also been lowered. In June, Russia's Ministry of Economic Development revised its forecast for GDP growth to 3.6 per cent; however, the macroeconomic framework for this year's budget, which assumes 4.3 per cent GDP growth, has remained unchanged. Similarly in Ukraine, the central bank lowered in June its forecast for GDP growth to 4.5-5 per cent although the government has not yet revised its own forecast of 6 per cent. There are also some exceptions to the general pattern among the CIS countries. Thus, the continuing economic boom in Kazakhstan has led to the forecast of GDP growth for the year as a whole being raised by some 3 percentage points to a range of 9-11 per cent. The official forecast for GDP growth in Kyrgyzstan has also been raised to 5-7 per cent although the mediocre performance of the economy in the first quarter hardly substantiates such a change.

Slower than expected west European growth could result in a further deterioration in eastern Europe's current account balances. In some cases corrective action might be required, but a tightening of macroeconomic policies would have adverse implications for growth in the transition economies. Moreover, the current account balances of the net fuel importers have come under renewed pressure from the recent increases in oil and (with a lag) gas prices. On the other hand, the energy exporting CIS countries will benefit from such a development, although part of their terms-of-trade gain will be offset by the fall in the value of the dollar. Despite the apparent slowing of inflows in the first quarter, FDI from planned privatisations is likely to continue to provide the bulk of current account financing in 2002.

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Notes

* The data covers the period up to 8 July 2002.

1. Economic Commission for Europe, Economic Survey of Europe 2002 No.1, New York and Geneva, 2002, chapter 1.
2. The Federal Reserve Board, The Beige Book, June 12, 2002 [www.federalreserve.gov/fomc]
3. These trends have affected not only portfolio flows - which are usually very volatile - but also FDI inflows. These had remained stable in the face of past international financial turbulence, but at present they are themselves undergoing a cyclical worldwide downturn.
4. Between January and March 2002 OECD petroleum demand declined (year-over-year) at the steepest rate in twelve years. IEA, Monthly oil market report, 13 May 2002.
5. European Commission, Business and Consumer Survey Results, June 2002.
6. In the first half of 2002 elements of such a policy stance could be seen in the Czech Republic, Hungary and Slovakia.
7. All three economies are highly concentrated on these products.
8. At the end of May 2002, Russia was declared a market economy by the European Commission; the US Government followed suit in early June.
9. Preliminary data for April 2002, indicate some recovery in the dollar values of exports and imports in most east European and Baltic countries, but it is still too early to judge its significance.
10. Economic Commission for Europe, op. cit., pp. 7-10

 

TABLE 1
Quarterly changes in real GDP in the major seven economies,
2000QIV-2002QI
(Percentage change over preceding quarter)

 

TABLE 2
Real GDP in the ECE market economies, 2000-2002
(Percentage change over previous year)

 

 

TABLE 4
International trade of the ECE transition economies, 2000-2002
(Percentage change over the same period of the previous year and per cent)

 

 

*******

 

For further information please contact:

UNECE Economic Analysis Division
Palais des Nations
CH - 1211 Geneva 10, Switzerland
Tel: +41(0)22 917 24 92
Fax: +41(0)22 917 03 09
E-mail: [email protected]
Web site: http://www.unece.org/ead/ead_h.htm

 

Ref: ECE/GEN/02/20