In this issue, William De Vijlder's editorial, Christine Peltier's analysis of the latest China economic indicators and our markets review and economic scenario sections.
Over the past three and a half decades, the world has undergone profound change. From a situation of balance in the early 1990s -the peace dividend, the Great Moderation, globalisation- we have ended up in a world characterised by geopolitical, economic (supply side) and environmental disruption. A distinctive and fascinating characteristic of this new era is the coexistence of abundance (data generation and dissemination, investment needs) and scarcity (shortage of skilled staff given population ageing, difficulty in finding financing). These developments raise important questions
After a rebound to +1.5% q/q in Q1 2024, Chinese economic growth slowed to +0.7% q/q. It stood at +5% year-on-year in the first half of the year. The economic growth target of “around 5%” set by Beijing for 2024 remains achievable.
GDP growth, inflation, exchange and interest rates.