1 / 24

Global Economic Outlook The Great Recession and Recovery

Global Economic Outlook The Great Recession and Recovery. Stephan S. Thurman, PhD Bureau for Economic, Energy, and Business Affairs for Wichita State University, October 2010. Disclaimer.

lpinnix
Télécharger la présentation

Global Economic Outlook The Great Recession and Recovery

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Global Economic Outlook The Great Recession and Recovery Stephan S. Thurman, PhD Bureau for Economic, Energy, and Business Affairs for Wichita State University, October 2010

  2. Disclaimer The State Department does not generate or publish a global economic outlook. The information contained in the slides below is generated from organizations or companies whose data are in the public domain, and to which the State Department has access. 1

  3. The Great Recession – Deepest in 30 Years 1

  4. The Great Recession – Trade Transmission 2

  5. Great Recession: Did We See it Coming? 3

  6. The ‘Great’ Recovery – Trade Returns 4

  7. The ‘Great’ Recovery …is a “V” …We Hope 5

  8. July 2010 IMF WEO Update 6

  9. Selected Country GDP Outlook 7

  10. Selected Country Inflation Outlook 8

  11. Selected Country Current Accounts 9

  12. Risks to the Great Recovery-- UNCERTAINTY -- • The “New Normal” – sluggish growth and little or no employment growth. • Sovereign Debt – the European periphery to be • sure, but other Advanced Economies? • 3. Further Stimulus or Consolidation? – when to • exit? – too early=renewed recession & too late= • unsustainable debt load • 4. Deflation – that combination of low or negative • GDP growth accompanied by negative inflation • -- present in Japan – “not likely” in U.S. or EU 10

  13. Policy Focus of the G20Washington, London, Pittsburg, Toronto ….and next month, Seoul, Korea Return to Growth with Quality Jobs Reform and Strengthen Financial Systems Complete Reforms of the International Financial Institutions Create Strong, Sustainable and Balanced Global Growth 11

  14. G20 Trade Surpluses Get Smaller,,,, 12

  15. ….while G20 Trade Deficits Shrink 13

  16. No Significant Global Imbalances 14

  17. Global Imbalances Emerge 15

  18. Global Imbalances Peak 16

  19. Global Imbalances Shrink With Recession 17

  20. Global Imbalances Re-Emerge with Recovery 18

  21. Three Sources of Savings Disposable Income Less Consumption Less Investment --------------------------- Taxes Less Revenues ---------------------------- Imports Less Exports Private Savings + Govt. Savings + Foreign Savings == 0 19

  22. G20 Policy Recommendations • Making more progress on rebalancing global demand • Advanced deficit countries should take actions to boost national savings while maintaining open markets and enhancing export competitiveness. • Surplus economies will undertake reforms to reduce their reliance on external demand and focus more on domestic sources of growth. • Strengthening social safety nets, enhancing corporate governance reform, financial market development, infrastructure spending, and greater exchange rate flexibility in some emerging markets. 20

  23. National Export InitiativeDouble Exports in 5 Years 21

More Related