OECD optimistic on global recovery
By Our Bureau
April 06, 2011
The Organisation for
Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) contends that the
outlook for world economic growth appears “significantly
better than a few months ago” with emerging market economies,
including China and India, underpinning the global
recovery.
In its interim assessment
released in Paris today, the inter-governmental think-tank of the
rich countries said growth in the traditional G-7 economies (the
US, the UK, France, Germany, Italy, Canada and Japan) outside Japan
appears to be ‘stronger than previously projected with
accelerating private sector investment and trade boosting
recovery”. Economic growth in the G-7 economies outside Japan
could rise to an annualised rate of about 3 per cent in the first
half of 2011, it said.
It said growth
perspectives are higher across the OECD area and the recovery is
becoming self-sustained, which meant there would be “less
need for fiscal or monetary policy support”. As the quake in
Japan casts uncertainty over the near-term outlook, the interim
assessment contains no projections for Japan.
Stating that unemployment
remains problematic, it said the OECD-wide unemployment rate
remains two percentage points higher than at the onset of the
crisis a couple of years ago. Inflationary expectations have been
creeping upwards, driven by rising commodity prices, but underlying
inflation rates are still low, reflecting the large excess capacity
that remains in labour and product markets.
While instability in the
West Asian region and North Africa and an associated possible
further increase in oil prices could act as a drag on economic
activity in the near term, OECD said uncertainty stemming from
sovereign debt risks in the euro area periphery could also prove
‘problematic'.
While making a
presentation of the interim economic assessment, the OECD Chief
Economist, Mr Pier Carlo Padoan, said in some OECD countries
monetary policy would need to deal with a risk that inflation
expectations may become unanchored. Public finances remain in
distress in most OECD countries and the priority is therefore, to
consolidate budgets and establish credible and growth-friendly
medium-term plans, he noted.
Finally, a combination of
well-targeted macro-economic and structural policies could achieve
a sustained reductionType your content here.
.