Monday, November 05, 2012

Britain to 'thrash' the rest of Europe next year




Britain will grow faster than the eurozone economies in 2013 and 2014, says the Centre for Economics and Business Research.




In its latest edition of its quarterly Global Prospects, CEBR predicts sluggish growth in the world economy over the next four years. Britain, however, will fare markedly better than Europe, the think tank suggests, contracting just 0.1% this year compared to the eurozone’s 0.7%. 

But it’s a somewhat hollow victory. With the ongoing eurozone crisis, like a 350-pound heavyweight wrestler stuffed with brie, chorizo, tzatziki and ravioli, squashing GDP growth across the bloc, Britain rather wins by default. Even Germany, Europe’s economic powerhouse, is struggling to throw off the financial gloom. It is set to grow 0.7% this year, 0.5% in 2013 and 1.2% in 2014 against Britain’s 0.8% forecasted growth next year, and 1.4% for 2014.

The eurozone as a whole will continue to shrink by 0.4% in 2013 and 2014, says the Cebr report, hampered chiefly by ongoing contractions in the Italian and Spanish economies. France will keep shrinking for the next year or so too, but will manage an assez bon 0.2% growth in 2014. 

The ongoing European recession is very bad news for everyone, including the UK, which counts the eurozone as its chief trading partner. ‘The economic situation in some parts of Europe is moving from bad to catastrophic,’ says Douglas McWilliams, chief executive of Cebr. ‘There is a danger that the economic problems will spill over into social breakdown in many areas of Europe as unemployment soars and governments run out of money.’

It’s not just uncertainty in the eurozone that is making it difficult to come up with accurate economic forecasts. In addition, the Middle East (or rather Middle Eastern oil supply) has become something of an economic free radical – any further disruption in these countries could have a knock-on effect on growth in our neck of the woods. If oil supply from the Middle East remains constant, however, then the price of oil should drop by about $5 per barrel. 

DATED: 05.11.12

FEED: MT

Bank of England to vote against stimulus



Bank of England policymakers are expected to vote against pumping more money into the economy this week as a think tank predicted growth in Britain will outpace that of any other major European economy in 2013 and 2014.
The Bank’s Monetary Policy Committee is expected to leave quantitative easing unchanged at £375bn and interest rates on hold at 0.5pc on Thursday after the economy bounced back with 1pc growth in the third quarter, reports The Telegraph.
Economists were previously forecasting a further £50bn injection of QE at the November policy meeting, but that view changed after the economy grew more strongly than expected between July and September, and the Bank’s deputy governor Charlie Bean questioned in a speech whether QE could boost growth in the current economic climate.
Howard Archer, chief UK economist at IHS Global Insight said Thursday’s decision would be a “close call” but expected no additional QE to be announced.
“We suspect that a majority of the MPC will decide to hold back from further stimulative action for now at least and see how the economy develops.”
Meanwhile economists at the Centre for Economics and Business Research said that Britain’s economy would fare better than its eurozone counterparts over the next couple of years.
Predicting that recession would continue in the eurozone in 2013, with only marginal growth in 2014, CEBR said Britain would grow by 0.8pc and 1.4pc respectively – faster than Germany, France, Italy and Spain.
“The economic situation in some parts of Europe is moving from bad to catastrophic. There is a danger that the economic problems will spill over into social breakdown in many areas of Europe as unemployment soars and governments run out of money,” said Douglas McWilliams, chief executive of CEBR. 

DATED: 05.11.12
FEED: BM

This page is powered by Blogger. Isn't yours?