Brexit dents global
economic outlook, fiscal stimulus ahead: Reuters poll
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[July 21, 2016]
By Rahul Karunakar
(Reuters) - Confidence in prospects for
the global economy has been dented following Britain's vote to leave
the European Union, with a growing view that monetary policy is a
fading force and many governments now need to borrow and spend,
Reuters polls showed.
Broad worries about political risks are also on the rise everywhere
and not restricted just to Brexit's repercussions and a failed coup
in Turkey. The United States is entering a period of heightened
uncertainty too, leading up to November elections.
The overarching worry is this more dangerous phase is coming at an
unwelcome time, when central bankers don't have anywhere near the
clout they had after the collapse of Lehman Brothers to deal with
another major economic or financial downturn.
"Given how fragile the global economy is nearly eight years after
the start of the global financial crisis, the last thing it needed
was the type of jolt provided by the UK's Brexit vote," wrote Janet
Henry, global chief economist at HSBC.
"We suspect fiscal policy will likely have a larger role to play in
many countries from here."
Reuters polls of above 500 economists across Asia, Europe and the
Americas reveal downgrades, or at best no change to growth forecasts
compared with previous months, as well as an incrementally weaker
inflation across most countries.
Even in the United States, where most of the economic optimism has
been focused in the developed world, there has been a slight
downgrade to the growth outlook and no discernible rise in inflation
expectations despite a hot job market.
The outlook for global growth this year has held at 3.0 percent, but
was trimmed by 0.1 percentage point to 3.2 percent for 2017, weaker
than the 3.4 percent forecast this week by the International
Monetary Fund.
The Group of 20 finance ministers and central bankers will meet in
China this weekend, with repercussions from Brexit and dwindling
policy options expected to dominate talks.
Concerns about the inability of major economies to generate any
amount of inflation have driven financial markets through wild
gyrations over the past year, despite the fact U.S. stocks are now
near record highs and sovereign bond yields are near record lows
almost everywhere.
Expectations for further easing from the Bank of England and the
Bank of Japan as well as the European Central Bank have calmed
financial markets somewhat and are likely to reinforce the existing
trend toward higher equity and bond prices as the extra cash has to
go somewhere.
TIME TO TURN ON FISCAL TAPS?
A majority of economists polled from around the global said
developed economies that can should now ramp up their fiscal
spending, as Canada and Japan have done recently.
Asked which countries needs to opt for some form of fiscal expansion
in the next six months, most economists chose major European
countries, many of which are currently pursuing austerity measures.
Germany was the top pick.
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A man and woman use their mobile phones as commuters walk past the
columns of the Bank of England in the City of London, July 3, 2012.
REUTERS/Andrew Winning/File Photo
Growth across much of the rest of the world is forecast to be uninspiring.
Britain's economy is expected to slide back into recession in the coming year
following its vote to leave the EU, pushing the Bank of England to cut interest
rates and restart its printing presses next month.
With a still-subdued economic outlook for the largest economies in the euro zone
and the added uncertainty of Brexit, the European Central Bank is likely to
extend and alter its asset purchase program, possibly by September.
The Bank of Japan in an attempt to boost inflation is expected to ease policy
later this month. That would double up with Shinzo Abe's plan for fresh round of
fiscal stimulus following an election win in the upper house.
Emerging market economies are not expected to fare much better, either. South
Africa looks to remain gripped by weak growth and persistently high inflation,
while Brazil, in a much worse kind of mess, is predicted to escape recession
next year.
China's economic growth is expected to cool to 6.5 percent this year and 6.3
percent in 2017, even as the government steps up fiscal spending and the central
bank loosens policy further to prevent a sharper slowdown.
India is one of the few exceptions in emerging markets with a stable outlook,
and is likely to maintain a faster growth rate than China over the next few
years.
"India has settled into a comfortable stride. Growth looks impressive, even if
that's not always matched by feelings on the ground," wrote Pranjul Bhandari,
chief economist, India at HSBC.
(For other stories from the Reuters global economic polls:)
(Polling, analysis and additional reporting by Reuters Polls Bengaluru and
bureaus in Kuala Lumpur, Bangkok, Manila, Jakarta, Hanoi, Sydney, Milan,
Johannesburg, Toronto, New York, Brasilia, Mexico City, Lima, Buenos Aires,
Bogota, Caracas, Santiago; Editing by Ross Finley and Catherine Evans)
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