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The World Economy

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 March 2020

Extract

There are signs that the slowdown in major seven growth may be coming to an end in the first and second quarters of 1992. The provisional first quarter data for the US indicated that growth had been slightly stronger than we had anticipated. However there are signs of continued weakness in the Japanese economy, and output growth throughout Europe has been below capacity. We are not expecting a sharp upturn in world activity, and we do not expect capacity utilisation rates to rise substantially in the near future. Chart 1 plots past data and our forecast of output growth in the major four economies. We believe that the last quarter of 1991 was the trough of the downturn in the US, Japan and Germany, and that growth will be higher in 1992 in the US and Canada than it was in 1991. Table 1 gives a summary of our forecast. The slow improvement in capacity utilisation that is shown in chart 2 is a major factor behind the rather optimistic outlook for inflation. Inflation is expected to fall in all of the major economies in 1992, and to rise only very slightly in Japan and Canada in 1993.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © 1992 National Institute of Economic and Social Research

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Footnotes

We would like to thank A Britton, D Mayes, G Young for helpful comments and Helen Finnegan and Olivier Chevalier for statistical assistance.

References

Notes

(1) The October 1987 stock market crash apparently had little immediate effect upon aggregate demand, and this was taken as evidence of the benefits of deregulation.

(2) This topic is discussed further in J Ermisch and P Westaway, ‘The dynamics of aggregate consumption in an open economy life cycle model’, National Institute discussion paper no. 190, 1990.

(3) The note in this Review by Barrell and in't Veld analyses the effects of equity price changes using our model, NIGEM.