OECD: Global Recession is Unlikely 09/09 10:21
LONDON (AP) -- The global economic recovery could be slower than expected
but another recession remains unlikely --- especially if governments don't
overdo their spending cuts, a leading international economic body said Thursday.
In its latest economic assessment, the Paris-based Organization for Economic
Cooperation and Development urged policymakers around the world to be careful
not to choke off the economic recovery by cutting back on spending too much and
too soon.
"If the slowdown reflects longer-lasting forces bearing down on activity,
additional monetary stimulus might be warranted," said the OECD's chief
economist Pier Carlo Padoan. "Where public finances permit, planned fiscal
consolidation could be delayed."
The OECD's recommendation on austerity measures represents a shift from its
view just a few months ago when it urged governments around the world to get a
grip on ballooning budget deficits.
Since its last recommendation in May, concerns about the global economic
recovery have mounted even though the economic situation in the 16-country
eurozone appears to have stabilized after a euro110 billion bailout of Greece
and agreement on a $1 trillion financial backstop for troubled governments.
Overall, the OECD now expects the Group of Seven rich industrialized
countries to grow by around 1.5 percent on an annualized basis in the second
half of 2010. The G-7 is: the U.S., Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy and
Japan.
Though that's down from its previous prediction of 1.75 percent issued in
May, the OECD still reckons that the loss of momentum in the recovery is likely
to prove "temporary."
"It is unlikely that we are heading into another downturn," said Padoan.
The OECD said robust corporate profits and already low business investment
indicate that capital spending is unlikely to weaken further, thereby helping
to support economic activity at a time when consumer spending is set to remain
weak.
And because inventories are now close to desired levels, a renewed depletion
of stocks is also unlikely, it added.
Based on the most recent data, the OECD said U.S. economic growth is
expected to rise by an annualized 2.0 percent in the third quarter but then
moderate to 1.2 percent in the fourth quarter.
In the second quarter, U.S. economic growth more than halved to a rate of
1.6 percent, triggering concerns that the world's largest economy was heading
for a so-called double-dip recession.
In Japan, the OECD sees growth rising to 0.7 percent in the fourth quarter
from 0.6 percent in the third. Though fairly muted, that's still an improvement
on the 0.4 percent growth posted in the second quarter of the year.
Meanwhile, the OECD said it expects the combined economy of the three
largest countries in the euro area --- Germany, France and Italy --- to grow at
a rate of 0.4 percent in the third quarter and 0.6 percent in the fourth
quarter. Though growing, those rates are way lower than the 5.1 percent growth
recorded in the second quarter when Germany, in particular, saw its exports
bounce massively as global trade picked up.
(KA)