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In the space of just a few months, growth prospects in the eurozone have deteriorated markedly. So much so that the risk of a recession is looming this year. Between our growth forecast from early 2021 – when it peaked at 5.5% – and our current scenario, drawn up in mid-March 2022, expected growth has been about halved; we now expect a figure of 2.8%. As recently as November 2021, we were still forecasting 4.2%. This figure of 2.8% still looks very high, as it is well above the long-term trend rate of 1.6% per year on average between 1996 and 2019. However, it relies on an exceptionally high growth carry-over of 2.1% in Q1 2022 and, for the subsequent quarters, on projected weak but positive growth
The war in Ukraine compounds the ECB’s task of balancing the fight against inflationary risks with the need to support growth. At the monetary policy meeting on 10 March, inflation was the predominant concern and the central bank announced that net securities purchases under the Asset Purchase Programme (APP) would probably end in Q3. This paves the way for the first increase in the key deposit rate, although the timing of the move is still highly uncertain. The inflationary shock is spreading while growth faces ever greater threats. Even so, pre-existing cyclical momentum, excess savings, investment needs and fiscal support measures should all help ease the risk of stagflation.
Of the Eurozone’s four major economies, Germany has the least positive growth outlook for 2022. Its economy is expected to grow by around 2% this year, whereas we are forecasting around 3% in Italy and France, and around 5% in Spain. Germany also has a lower Q4 2021 growth carry-over, greater exposure to the economic repercussions of the war in Ukraine, and pre-existing supply-chain problems in its manufacturing industry. The fall in the ifo index in March, particularly the business expectations component, illustrates well these headwinds, and this decline serves as a recession alert.
Countries neighbouring Russia and Ukraine are more exposed than those in Western Europe. Among the latter, there are differences, with Germany and Italy being more dependent on Russian gas than France, Spain or Portugal. The countries that import the most from Russia are also the most dependent on Ukrainian imports. The exposure of European countries to Russia and Ukraine, and their vulnerabilities to the economic repercussions of the war between these two countries, result primarily from the high weight of their imports of Russian energy supplies and Ukrainian food and agricultural products
Eurostat’s flash estimate puts eurozone inflation for March at 7.5% y/y, representing another very substantial increase (up 1.6 points on the February figure). Inflation continues to be driven mainly by energy prices – the energy component contributed 4.9 percentage points to this figure, thus explaining 65% of the total – but the other components (food, manufactured goods, services) are also seeing increases and each contributed around one point. Thus, inflation is getting more widespread and all eurozone countries have been affected by its recent acceleration, albeit to varying degrees.
Abundant job creations in the Eurozone helped bring down the unemployment rate to a historically low level in 2021, but this has also led to hiring difficulties and labour shortages. Labour shortages seem to be having the most restrictive impact in Germany (in all sectors), given the already low unemployment rate. They seem to be weakest in Italy where the job market is less dynamic, and this hierarchy was confirmed regardless of the sector. In France, labour market tensions are the highest in the construction, and comparatively less important in the manufacturing and services sectors. Production constraints due to labour shortages have reached a record high in the services sector, especially in Germany
First of all, we will pay particular attention to the extent of the upward revision of the European Central Bank's inflation projections. We expect major revisions given the latest developments and the most recent inflation figures, which continue to rise (headline inflation hit 5.8% y/y in February, according to the Eurostat flash estimate, and core inflation was 2.7% y/y).
Usually close, French and German inflations, measured on a comparable basis by Eurostat’s harmonized index of consumer prices (HICP), have diverged sharply since the beginning of 2021, with inflation on the other side of the Rhine largely exceeding that in France. In November 2021, the gap reached +2.6 percentage points compared with an average of +0.2 pp since 1991. This difference is, for a part, due to a VAT effect: the decrease in the German rates in the second half of 2020 initially pulled down German inflation but the return to their previous level reverted that trend in 2021. In January 2022, with the end of this VAT effect, German inflation fell back quite significantly (to 5.1% y/y according to Eurostat’s flash estimate, from 5.7% in December) but is still very high
Economic newsflow was particularly rich last week. The first important items, looking in the rear-view mirror, were the first growth estimates for Q4 2021 in France, Germany and Spain. Performances were mixed, between the 0.7% q/q contraction in Germany, further strong growth of 2% q/q in Spain and, between these two, growth of 0.7% q/q in France.
Euro notes and coins were introduced on 1 January 2022, and the euro is celebrating that 20th anniversary in fairly good shape. However, there are still many plans to improve and strengthen the European project and increase integration. This is shown by the topics on the agenda during the French presidency of the Council of the European Union over the next six months. Priorities will include reforming European fiscal rules, which will be a major topic of debate in 2022. Discussions are underway and decisions should be made this year. The challenge will be to avoid an anticlimax
The resurgence of the Covid-19 pandemic and the emergence of the new Omicron variant make the ECB’s task even harder. Although growth should hold at a high level, it is expected to ease, and this trend could worsen, at least in the short term. Meanwhile inflation continues to soar, while becoming more broadbased, and the risk in the coming months is on the upside. Faced with greater uncertainty, the ECB is arguing in favour of patience and constancy while saying it is ready to act in any direction. According to our scenario, which is somewhat optimistic in terms of growth and calls for persistent inflation, the ECB would end its Pandemic Emergency Purchase Programme (PEPP) in March 2022 and begin raising its key deposit rate in mid-2023.
Factors hampering growth in the short term are gaining strength (supply chain disruptions, surging inflation, and the resurgence in the Covid-19 pandemic), but the resilience of business sentiment through November as well as numerous targeted measures to support household purchasing power help allay fears. In Q4 2021, we are forecasting growth of 0.6%, although the risk is on the downside. In full-year 2021, growth is expected to average 6.7%. In 2022, it will remain a robust 4.2%, bolstered by the accommodative policy mix, the unblocking of excess savings, the catching-up of the services sector as well as strong investment and restocking needs.
The ECB’s meeting on 16 December is highly anticipated, primarily for the central bank’s new growth and inflation forecasts. When it comes to growth, the ECB’s September forecast was for annual average growth of 5% in 2021, 4.6% in 2022 and 2.1% in 2023. It could leave its 2021 forecast unchanged, with the positive figures for Q3 offset by a less positive view of Q4, due to the effect of supply constraints, inflationary pressures and a resurgence of the pandemic. Growth in 2022 will be weakened by the same factors. The scale of the forecast downward revision will indicate the level of the ECB’s concerns. It will also be interesting to see whether any growth ‘lost’ in 2022 will be shifted, in part at least, into a higher forecast for 2023.
The first indications for Q4 2021 suggest that the main confidence indicators are holding at high levels, especially business sentiment. The improvement in the French labour market observed over the past several months also seems to be continuing. With Q3 GDP growth recently confirmed at 3% q/q, France should have no trouble reaching our full-year 2021 forecast of 6.7%. Even so, our Pulse seems to suggest that growth is slowing, held back by several headwinds. The first is the lag between order books and the turnaround time necessary for companies to meet demand. Order books have been full for several months, but supply disruptions are accumulating.
According to our Pulse, the Eurozone’s cyclical situation has deteriorated over the past three months (the blue area is smaller than the area within the dotted lines). Hard data have dropped sharply but the decline in business climate surveys has been much milder. This difference is due to statistical distortions. For retail sales and production, the sharp decline in growth rates in year-on-year terms since May reflects a normalisation after the previous 3-month average was inflated by very favourable base effects in March and April.
The initial estimate of French growth in Q3 2021 surprised on the upside, with a rebound in GDP of 3% q/q, well ahead of our forecast (2.2%) as well as those of Banque de France (2.3%) and INSEE (2.7%). Furthermore, Q2 growth has been revised upwards by 0.2 points to 1.3%. One quarter ahead of schedule, France’s GDP is therefore almost back to its pre-crisis level of Q4 2019. Besides, the growth carry-over reaches 6.6%. Hence, on average over 2021, growth will be much stronger than expected (government forecast of 6.25% and our forecast of 6.3%).
In the 2022 draft budget bill, the French government foresees a deficit of 8.4% of GDP in 2021 and 4.8% of GDP in 2022 (vs. 9.1% in 2020). The public debt ratio is expected to increase to 115.6% of GDP in 2021 (from 115% in 2020), before declining slightly to 114% in 2022. The large reduction in the deficit between 2021 and 2022 is primarily automatic. The improvement in the cyclical deficit is expected to contribute 1.6 points, while the 2.1-point reduction in the structural deficit is mainly due to the halting of most of the emergency support measures.
According to our Pulse, the economic situation in the euro zone remains good (the blue area exceeds the grey hendecagon indicating the long-term average of the various indicators) and is relatively stable relative to the previous three months (the blue area is close to that delimited by the dotted line), with the notable exception of retail sales.
Since year-end 2020, Eurozone inflation has risen almost vertically. A year ago, year-on-year inflation was still slightly negative, but by September 2021, it had risen to 3.4% (according to Eurostat’s preliminary estimate), the highest level since September 2008. The surge was strongest in Germany, followed by Spain, and to a lesser extent, Italy and France. In Germany, inflation bears the marks of the temporary VAT cut in H2 2020. In Spain, the upturn in energy prices was accentuated by a higher VAT rate on electricity than in most of the other European countries. The updating of weights in the price index also played an important role at the beginning of the year
After rebounding vigorously in Q2 (+2.2% q/q), GDP growth is expected to maintain the same dynamic pace in Q3. Admittedly, supply-side constraints have just chipped away a few tenths of a percentage point of growth from our June forecast. September’s business climate surveys are showing more traces of these tensions, especially in industry, and in Germany in particular. Even so, the survey results are still holding at high levels. Growth in the Eurozone will get a boost from the monetary and fiscal accommodation, the freeing of forced savings built-up by households, the recovering job market and the need for investment. We expect 2022 growth to be slightly higher than in 2021 (5.2% and 5%, respectively, in annual average terms)
Despite April’s lockdown, French GDP rose strongly in Q2 2021, up 1.1% q/q. The lockdown’s negative impact was very mild, and the economy rebounded strongly in June. Q3 growth is expected to reach 2.2% q/q, on the one hand buoyed by Q2 strong momentum, but on the other hand curbed by the supply-side constraints at work. In business climate surveys, optimism still prevails, although it has been fading since June. In Q4, GDP growth is expected to virtually close the gap, covering the last percentage point before economic activity returns to 100% of pre-crisis levels. This would bring average annual growth to 6.3% in 2021. In 2022, GDP growth is expected to return to more normal levels although it will remain strong, bolstered by the fiscal impulse
For the first time in several months, the INSEE and Markit business climate surveys did not move in the same direction in September. The INSEE composite index picked up slightly (up 1 point to 111), while the composite PMI continued to erode (down 1 point to 55). The activity component of the manufacturing PMI declined more sharply (down 3 points to 51.3) than for the services PMI.
After two quarters of slight contraction (-0.4% q/q in Q4 2020, -0.3% in Q1 2021), during which lockdown restrictions were reintroduced in various countries in the zone, growth bounced back strongly in Q2 2021 (up 2.2% q/q, 14.3% y/y). The growth carry-over is nearly 4% and the gap to the pre-crisis GDP level of Q4 2019 is now only 2.5%. The strength of the rebound had already been seen in survey data from April to June, whether from Markit’s PMI or the European Commission’s Economic Sentiment Index (ESI).
According to INSEE’s preliminary estimate, French GDP grew 0.9% q/q in Q2 2021. This outcome was slightly better than expected, as we had forecast a 0.8% rise and INSEE a 0.7% increase. Although growth in France was significantly weaker than across the euro zone at large (2% q/q) or the United States (1.6% q/q), it was still a decent figure given the circumstances. Indeed, despite the third lockdown in April, it lay well inside positive territory. The lockdown’s negative impact on economic activity was even more modest than that of the second lockdown.
To determine whether the French labour market has returned to good health, we can use the two gauges retained by the French government in the unemployment insurance reform: 1/ the number of “category A” jobseekers must have decreased by at least 130,000 over six months; 2/ hiring reports for jobs lasting more than 1 month (excluding temporary work) must also exceed a 4-month moving average of 2.7 million contracts. In June 2021, both these criteria were met. The improvement is less surprising for hiring reports than for registrations with the “Pôle Emploi” employment service, with the bar seemingly more easily reachable for the former than for the latter. This first positive sign[1] still needs to be confirmed over the coming months but things seem to be on the right track