For the fourth year in a row, Spain will be the primary growth driver in the Eurozone. This country’s outperformance is expected to continue over the remainder of 2024, albeit with very slightly less momentum than in H1 (expected growth of +0.6% and +0.7% q/q in Q3 and Q4 after +0.9% and 0.8% in Q1 and Q2). Foreign trade, mainly driven by the still significant growth in exports of tourism services, should continue to support activity. For its part, the marked fall in inflation (+2.4% y/y in August; -1.2 pp over two months), combined with the strength of the labour market, should allow private consumption to gradually recover.
The Dutch economy avoided falling back into recession in the second quarter, thanks to a much smaller annual drop in exports and solid public spending, which was a promise from the new government. However, inflation is stronger than expected and will need to be monitored, as it could become a drag on private consumption. The outlook remains fine, nevertheless, but investments need to recover further in order to compensate for persisting labour shortages.
Our nowcast for the ongoing third quarter has Belgian growth at slightly below trend. Household consumption hasn’t accelerated much, while typical-election year dynamics inflate government spending. Gross fixed capital formation, dominated by firm investment, remains positive but the underlying trend is worrying. Belgian manufacturers seem especially far from a return to normal, while the spectre of fiscal tightening looms.
The presentation of the budget on 30 October will be the first real test for Rachel Reeves. The deteriorating situation of the public accounts and the September 2022 mini-budget crisis, which is on everyone's minds, are leaving the Chancellor of the Exchequer with little room for manoeuvre. UK growth is expected to slow in the second half of 2024 (+0.3% quarter-on-quarter). The two policy rate cuts by the Bank of England (BoE) that we expect in 2024 (August and November) would enable growth to come close to its potential level during this year and in 2025.
In H2 2024, Swiss growth is expected to ease slightly (0.3% q/q in Q3 and 0.2% q/q in Q4 according to our forecasts). The persistent weakness of the country's main trading partners will continue to weigh on its growth, but the lagged impacts of the monetary easing initiated by the SNB in March 2024 should play out more favourably. We expect the SNB to make two further policy rate cuts by the end of the year, due in particular to the favourable developments seen in inflation in recent months.
Australian growth is facing an undeniable slowdown, which is linked to the prolonged constraints on households as a result of rising prices and interest rates, as well as slowing demand from its Asian trading partners. Stubborn inflation is currently an obstacle to easing interest rates. On the other hand, the migratory influx is boosting a labour market which remains buoyant.
In a previous article, we discussed the major challenge for the European Union (EU): to accelerate its ecological transition while dealing with the consequences of the ageing of its population. It so happens that the stakes have just been clarified in the Draghi report on the future of European competitiveness. In order to preserve their social model or not stall in the face of Chinese and American competition, the EU 27 countries should increase their productive investment by at least EUR 800 billion per year, which entails an unprecedented effort (equivalent to 4.7 GDP points, i.e., at least two Marshall Plans)
GDP growth, inflation, exchange and interest rates.
Bank Indonesia unexpectedly cut its monetary policy rates on 18 September (-25 bps). This easing was largely due to the rupiah strengthening against the USD since August (+6.4%).
Economic indicators for August 2024 once again show that Chinese economic growth is lacking strength. The real GDP growth target of “around 5%” set by Beijing for 2024 can only be achieved with a stronger impetus generated by monetary easing and fiscal expansion.
Growth in emerging markets held up fairly well until the spring of 2024, partly thanks to the easing of monetary policies since mid-2023. The imminent one in the United States should make it possible to extend or even strengthen it. In the most likely scenario of a soft landing of the US economy, the main risk for emerging economies is a sharper-than-expected slowdown in the Chinese economy. The slump in the real estate sector is spreading through the fall in commodity prices. On the one hand, most emerging countries will gain in disinflation. But, on the other hand, commodity-exporting countries of which China is the main customer will suffer. Above all, the risk of contagion lies in the implications of the Chinese authorities' strategy of supporting growth through foreign trade
Uncertainty around US economic policy, based on media coverage, fell for a second month in a row in August. This drop is likely due to Jerome Powell’s speech on 23 August at Jackson Hole, where the Chair of the Federal Reserve stated that the time has come for policy to adjust, meaning it is time to lower rates. This announcement echoed the views of some Fed officials, as expressed in the Federal Reserve’s minutes published on 21 August.
GDP growth, inflation, interest and exchange rates.
Growth and inflation figures in the UK have surprised favourably since the beginning of the year. These results are of course welcome, but they do not reflect a genuine recovery in the economic situation across the Channel.
The household savings rate in France has risen further, up from 17.6% of households' gross disposable income (GDI) in Q1 2024 to 17.9% in Q2 2024, according to the INSEE, i.e. 1 point more in a year. This is also an early sign of an upward trend underway in the Eurozone. While the figures for Q2 are not yet available, the Q1 figures pointed to a savings rate 3 points higher than its pre-COVID level (at 15.4%).
The S&P Global Composite PMI Output Index resumed rising in August, gaining 0.3 points to 52.8, after two months of decline. This is an encouraging sign for global activity halfway through Q3 2024. However, this improvement masks a fairly clear divergence between the services sector and the manufacturing one. In August, the global services index hit its highest level (53.8) since June 2023 (with the exception of May 2024), while the manufacturing sector index recorded its lowest level since December 2023 (49.5).
Historical relationships between economic data play a key role in shaping expectations. In the US, the Sahm rule is such an important stylised fact: when the recent increase in the unemployment rate reaches a certain threshold, a recession tends to follow shortly or has even already begun. The jobs report published early August showed that this critical value had been reached, triggering a drop in investor sentiment. At the Jackson Hole conference, Jerome Powell explained that the Fed’s focus is shifting to the labour market and brought an unambiguous message that the rate cutting cycle is to start in September
In August 2024, French inflation is expected to fall back below 2% year-on-year for the first time in three years (August 2021). This disinflation is mainly linked to energy prices and is expected to increase further at the start of 2025 for the same reasons (expected drop in electricity prices). By contrast, inflation in services, which has been impacted by an Olympic effect in particular, is expected to remain high in the short term, but will not prevent further disinflation.
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.
While recent economic data across the board suggest that growth was strong in Q2, leading indicators (business climate, household confidence) were more mixed in June, pointing to a more difficult Q3. This is particularly the case in the US, where even the ISM non-manufacturing index deteriorated sharply in June, while in Japan and the UK, growth should return to a more normal level after a very favourable Q2 (and benefiting from rebound effects in Japan, after a more difficult Q1).