In this Audiobrief, Stéphane Colliac discusses selfemployment in France. It has been growing again for almost 20 years, particularly in household services, but also in business services. In France, which has created nearly 420000 jobs a year over the last 5 years, self-employment has represented almost one job creation out of 5
In this Audiobrief, Guillaume Derrien discusses recent evolution of the European Union's trade balance. The latter moved back to a surplus in 2023. Despite China’s ramping up to higher value-added sectors, the EU trade surplus in traditionally buoyant industries (pharmaceuticals, automotive) remains at historically-high levels.
In this audiobrief, Stéphane Colliac describes France’s trade deficit for 2023 main drivers. In addition to a deficit linked to imports of hydrocarbons and a structural deficit reflecting the country’s de-industrialisation, it is also driven by France’s investment in the needs arising from the ecological and digital transition and the electrification of the car industry.
In two podcasts Daniel Morris, Chief Market Strategist of BNP Paribas Asset Management discusses with William De Vijlder, Group Chief Economist of BNP Paribas the impact of geopolitical uncertainty on the economy. In this first podcast, they look at economic and geopolitical uncertainty, why it matters and how it can be measured.
In the second podcast on geopolitical uncertainty and its economic consequences, Daniel Morris and William De Vijlder look more closely at the impact of geopolitical uncertainty on firms, households and financial markets.
In this series of two podcasts Andrew Craig, co-head of the Investments Insight Center at BNP Paribas Asset Management, interviewed William de Vijlder, group chief economist of the Economic Research of BNP Paribas regarding the central banks policies to fight inflation. Among the questions answered in the first episode are: Are we at the peak or can we expect further rates hikes? Is the inflation going to declines? at which pace?
In the second and last episode of the series on central banks and their fight against inflation, Andrew Craig and William de Vijlder are looking beyond the peak and discuss what will come next. Among the questions are: how long will central banks hold rates at these levels? How long will they plateau at these current levels? what come after that?
In this series of three podcasts "Focus on Labour Productivity in Spain" Hélène Baudchon, Deputy Chief Economist and Head of the OECD team, BNP Paribas Economics Department and Guillaume Derrien, Senior Economist in the OECD team, discuss productivity as an endemic weakness of the Spanish model.This first episode reviews the main trends in the evolution of productivity in Spain compared to its European neighbours over the last 25 years.
In this second episode of the series on labour productivity in Spain, Hélène Baudchon and Guillaume Derrien discuss the main factors that explain Spain's low productivity
This third and final episode of the series dedicated to labour productivity in Spain, discusses key developments capable of restoring productivity in Spain, in particular through the National Recovery Plan (2021-2026) and the España 2050 strategy.
In this new AudioBrief, Guillaume Derrien, economist within the OECD team, discusses the close relationship between global growth and the evolution of international trade.
In the face of the sharp rise in energy prices, governments of the main eurozone economies took measures to ease the pain for households. If the decline in their purchasing power should be limited in 2022, it should not be fully eliminated.
In this series of podcasts, William De Vijlder, Group Chief Economist of BNP Paribas, discusses the issue of stagflation, a term that has been increasingly used in the media in recent months. Stagflation, a multi-year phenomenon combining rising unemployment and high inflation, brings us back to the dark days of the 1970s and 1980s, when inflation levels were unprecedented and mass unemployment began. In the current economic environment, which bears the brunt of the shocks of the COVID-19 pandemic and the war in Ukraine, inflation is exceptionally high. Should we fear the return of stagflation? What is the central banks' room for manoeuvre to address the issue of a high and persistent inflation without damaging growth? And what can fiscal policy do to cushion economic shocks?