Due to the recent significant increase in interest rates, Eurozone countries now have a borrowing cost on newly issued debt that, for an equivalent maturity, is higher than that of the existing debt. From a debt sustainability perspective, this necessitates a smaller primary deficit or a larger surplus, depending on whether the average interest cost is, respectively, lower or higher than the long-term nominal GDP growth rate. However, this effect will only be fully operational when the entire debt has been refinanced at the higher interest rate. Given the long average maturity of existing debt, the annual adjustment effort is small for the time being but it will grow over time. However, debt sustainability is about more than keeping the debt ratio stable under certain circumstances
The global manufacturing PMI has continued its decline in September. There was a small improvement in Canada and the US but the euro area recorded a further decline, with data dropping in France, Germany and the Netherlands. The index was also down in China whereas India, Indonesia and Vietnam are holding up well. The situation deteriorated significantly in terms of new orders. It is particularly bad in the euro area and the UK although the negative environment is now very broad-based across countries. Orders were down in Japan and China as well, whereas Indonesia saw an improvement. Despite the low readings for the overall index and in particular the new orders component, the employment survey continues to show some resilience.
Despite the still very severe difficulties in the automotive sector and for gas and electricity suppliers, Japanese industry is holding up. The record level of profits recorded by Japanese manufacturers in the second quarter, as reported in the Ministry of Finance’s quarterly survey, was a first significant factor. In addition, the September Tankan survey was better than expected. The general diffusion index improved by 1 point (3) compared with an expected drop of the same magnitude. Confidence in the non-manufacturing sector was the most positive surprise.
In France, inflation fell to 5.6% year-on-year in September after reaching a high of 6.1% in July, but its decomposition has changed. Food prices (with a year-on-year increase of 9.9% in September) became the main contribution to inflation for the first time (representing a third of the 5.6% figure observed in September), exceeding that of the energy component, the reduction of which owes much to the discount applied to the litre of fuel (which grew from 18 to 30 cents). In 2023, the increase in regulated gas and electricity tariffs will be capped at 15% instead of 120%, which will prevent 5 inflation points (overall), according to our estimates.
The weekly number of new cases of Covid-19 in Europe has continued to increase, for the third consecutive week, with 1.7 million new infections between 29 September and 5 October, an increase of 17% compared to the previous week. The number of people frequenting shops and leisure facilities is very slightly above its pre-pandemic level in Belgium, while it has recently gone back to slightly below this level in Italy. However it remains somewhat more noticeably below pre-Covid levels in the rest of our sample (France, Germany, Spain, Japan, the United Kingdom and the United States).