OECD Doubles 2010 Growth Forecast, Recovery to Widen
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aRWN9li8h13s&pos=1

Nov. 19 (Bloomberg) -- The Organization for Economic Cooperation and
Development doubled its growth forecast for the leading developed
economies next year and predicted a further acceleration in 2011 as
China powers a global recovery.

The economy of the group’s 30 member countries will expand 1.9 percent
next year and 2.5 percent in 2011, the Paris-based organization said
in a report today. Output will contract 3.5 percent this year. The
OECD, which advises members on economic policy, forecast 2010 growth
of 0.7 percent in June.

The MSCI World Index has surged 69 percent in the past eight months as
the world economy emerges from its worst recession in more than half a
century. While the U.S. and the euro region will return to growth next
year, mounting debt burdens will keep the expansion in check, the OECD
said.

“We now have numbers that support a recovery in motion,” Jorgen
Elmeskov, the OECD’s acting chief economist, said in an interview.
“It’s still a slow recovery because of considerable headwinds from the
need to adjust the balance sheets of households, enterprises and
financial sectors.”

The MSCI index, down 0.8 percent today, was little changed immediately
after the OECD report was published. The yield on the benchmark German
10-year government bond stayed at 3.292 percent.

Meltdowns

The U.S. economy will grow 2.5 percent in 2010 instead of the 0.9
percent predicted in June and the euro region will advance 0.9 percent
instead of a projection it would stagnate, the OECD said. Japan will
post growth of 1.8 percent instead of 0.7 percent. The forecast for
China was raised to 10.2 percent.

“Outside of the OECD, things are more buoyant, especially in Asia,”
Elmeskov said. “The non-OECD countries weren’t affected by asset-price
meltdowns as much and up to the downturn ran sensible economic
policies.”

The relative weakness of the U.S. and the euro region is prompting
policy makers to put China under pressure to allow the yuan to
appreciate more and help their exporters. President Barack Obama told
Chinese leaders this week the U.S. expects to see progress by next
year on making the exchange rate “more flexible,” Ambassador Jon
Huntsman said.

The OECD also gave 2011 forecasts for the first time. The U.S. will
grow 2.8 percent, the euro area 1.7 percent and Japan 2 percent. The
Chinese economy will expand 9.3 percent, it said.

OECD output will only return to the level achieved in the first three
months of 2008 in the third quarter of 2011.

The OECD said unemployment in the bloc will increase by 21 million by
the end of 2010 compared with 2007, taking the rate to 9 percent.
Adobe Systems Inc., the world’s biggest maker of graphic-design
programs, said Nov. 11 it plans to cut about 9 percent of its global
workforce.

Political Pressure

Rising unemployment may put more pressure on politicians such as Prime
Minister Gordon Brown and Nicolas Sarkozy, who are struggling in the
polls as the recession bites and swells their budget deficits. In the
U.K., where Brown must call an election by June, unemployment is the
highest since 1997.

The OECD said that gross debt among its 30 members may exceed their
total gross domestic product by 2011 from 90 percent this year.

Sluggish growth means most OECD central banks should be careful in
tightening monetary policy as their economies recover, the
organization said.

While non-conventional measures may need to be withdrawn in the months
ahead to counter a “large overhang of liquidity,” interest rates
shouldn’t start to move up until inflationary pressures begin to be
felt, the report said.

Weak Recovery

“The recovery is weak and there is a lot of spare capacity,” Elmeskov
said.

The OECD’s forecasts assume the U.S. Federal Reserve and the European
Central Bank hold off on rate increases until almost the end of 2010
and the Bank of Japan maintains its benchmark rate at 0.1 percent
through 2011, he added.

The ECB’s main rate, currently at 1 percent, will probably climb to 2
percent by the end of 2011 and the Fed’s benchmark will rise to 2.25
percent in that time from close to zero at present.

While unprecedented liquidity injections have raised concern about new
asset bubbles that policy makers need to be aware of, they have yet to
materialize, the OECD says.

“We are talking about a risk here, not something that is happening,”
Elmeskov said. “One can say that given where we are there’s little
alternative to very low rates but we need to be aware that they could
imply the risk of bubbles forming.”

Unsettle Markets

Even so, central banks and governments around the world must take care
not to unsettle markets when they communicate how they will unwind
stimulus measures, the OECD said.

For now, stock and commodity indices are rising and the return to
growth is boosting corporate earnings. The Dow Jones Industrial
Average and the S&P 500 Index have gained 19 percent and 23 percent
this year and the price of crude oil has risen 77 percent. Gold has
jumped 55 percent in the past 12 months.

In the U.K., William Morrison Supermarkets Plc said today that same-
store sales rose 4.3 percent in the three months through Nov. 1. A.P.
Moeller-Maersk A/S, the owner of the world’s largest container
shipping line, said yesterday that the market will return to growth
next year and that freight rates may rise.

“Unprecedented policy efforts appear to have succeeded in limiting the
severity of the downturn and fostering a recovery to a degree that was
largely unexpected even six months ago,” Elmeskov said in the report.
“It is now time to plan the exit strategy form the crisis policies.”



On Nov 19, 4:54 am, Xi Ling <[email protected]> wrote:
> My comments: Today we know that Singapore is to deply exit rules as growth
> is already robust enough and their expectations for 2010 too (1). We already
> know good results from China and Japan and we are expecting a flood of good
> news from other countries in the area.
>
> We can see that Baltic Dry Index is growing fair, step by step, along the
> year and its trend is growth too. We can predict that at last first half of
> 2010 will be nice as far as it is related to growth.
>
> Also, we see some commodities as signs of robust growth of the global
> economy. Watch attached charts for soybeans, copper, gold and crude oil.
>
> However, those signs also warn us that price inflation is coming.everywhere.
>
> Peace and best wishes.
>
> Xi
>
>  bdi_soy_nov2009_2.gif
> 25KViewDownload
>
>  bdi_gold_nov2009_2.gif
> 24KViewDownload
>
>  bdi_copper_nov2009_2.gif
> 22KViewDownload
>
>  bdi_crude_nov2009_2.gif
> 22KViewDownload
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