For a large sample of developed economies, government debt as a percentage of GDP has been on a rising trend over the past 40 years. High public sector debt weakens the resilience of the economy to cope with interest rate and growth shocks. This calls for embarking, at some point in time, on a fiscal consolidation. Clearly, now is not the time. The economy is still recovering from the Covid-19 shock and the outlook remains highly uncertain. Nor is there any urgency, considering the very low interest rates. However, the absence of urgency in the near term should not make us forget about the necessity to act at a later stage. Otherwise, the resilience of the economy would weaken further. It would also represent a bet that in every downturn, central bank QE will come to the rescue.
China’s economic dynamics have remained the same in the past three months, i.e. the recovery has continued and strengthened gradually. As a result, real GDP registered positive growth of 0.7% y/y in the first three quarters of 2020, and 4.9% y/y in Q3 alone. The main economic sectors all reported positive growth in the first three quarters: +2.3% in the primary sector (vs. 3.1% in 2019), +0.9% in the secondary sector (vs. 5.7% in 2019) and +0.4% in the tertiary sector (vs. 6.9% in 2019). These data underline both the solid capacity of the Chinese economy to rebound after the Q1 shock, and the greater fragility of the services sector, where the recovery has started later and been slower than in the industrial sector...