Global growth? Sure. But still not much inflation pressure: Reuters poll

Reuters  |  BENGALURU 

By Anu Bararia and Hari Kishan

(Reuters) - The is on its best roll in years and set to do better in 2018, but economists in polls around the world mostly said synchronous growth is not about to spawn significant price pressures.

Indeed, while several major central banks have shifted their bias away from ultra-easy monetary policy, with a few notable exceptions, remains below their targets and is generally set to stay that way in the year ahead.

"It is becoming a familiar refrain. Another quarter, another set of upward revisions to our growth forecasts, another downward revision to our forecasts," said Janet Henry, chief economist at HSBC.

"But for developed world central banks, the task is getting ever harder. Tackling both low and rising financial stability risks will demand a delicate balancing act by central banks and a more nuanced approach to targeting if the expansion is to be sustained."

In surveys taken Oct 3-24 of more than 500 economists across Asia, Europe and the Americas, 2017 and 2018 growth forecasts for nearly three-quarters of the 48 economies polled were raised or left unchanged.

economic growth as a whole is forecast at 3.5 percent this year, steady compared with a published three months ago but a tad lower than the recently upgraded view from the International Monetary Fund.

While the consensus forecast for 2018 also remained steady at 3.6 percent, a majority who answered an additional question said the risk to their forecasts were skewed more to the upside.

However, respondents cut their 2017 forecasts for nearly two-thirds of the economies surveyed.

Around 40 percent of the 134 economists who answered an extra question said pressures won't pick up until 2019 or beyond while a quarter said they were unlikely to rebound at all. The rest said they will before end-2018.

Erik Nelson, a strategist at Wells Fargo in New York, said for their growth forecasts, which are roughly in line with the consensus, picking up faster than expected is the number one risk.

"If picks up a lot more than we are expecting, either in the United States or other economies, and central banks have to tighten a little more aggressively than we currently think, then there is probably some downside risk for those forecasts," Nelson said.

CHALLENGE FOR CENTRAL BANKS

central banks are at different stages in removing monetary policy accommodation, with persistently weak nearly everywhere complicating decision-making.

"Low expectations may have become self-fulfilling, so low is likely more persistent than what central banks think," said Mikael Milhoj, senior analyst at Danske Bank.

The U.S. Federal Reserve is expected to raise interest rates in December and twice next year, according to economists who largely said risks were skewed more to a slower pace of hikes.

Uncertainty over who U.S. President Donald Trump will choose to head the Fed when Chair Janet Yellen's term ends on Feb. 1 has also clouded the outlook.

One of the candidates Trump has interviewed and is seriously considering according to reports, former Treasury undersecretary John Taylor, was deemed in a as likely to adopt the most radical change to current policy were he to be appointed.

After more than two years of purchases worth over 2 trillion euros in total, the European Central Bank is expected to announce at its meeting on Thursday that it will trim asset purchases to 40 billion euros a month from January and continue buying securities for another six or nine months.

The rising risk of a disorderly Brexit won't deter the Bank of England - the only major central bank dealing with running well above its target - from making what a majority of economists say will be a policy error by raising rates for the first time in a decade on Nov. 2.

The Chinese economy, Asia's largest and the world's second-biggest, is forecast to expand 6.4 percent next year but faces twin risks of managing its massive debt pile as well as a highly inflated property market.

there is expected to be more muted at 1.6 percent this year, down from last year's 2.0 percent, due to weak food price rises, but is expected to pick up to 2.2 percent in 2018.

Asia's third-largest economy, India, is predicted to grow 6.7 percent in 2018 - its weakest pace in four years - following disruptions caused by a government currency ban late last year and a new national tax launched in July.

And the biggest in Latin America, Brazil's, is likely to outpace Mexico for the first time in five years this year thanks to record-low interest rates. It will grow 2.3 percent in 2018, the found.

(For other stories from the long-term economic outlook polls package)

(Additional reporting by Shrutee Sarkar in Bengaluru; Polling and reporting by the Polls team in and bureaus in Seoul, Beijing, Sydney, Shanghai, Tokyo, London, Milan, Paris, Stockholm, Istanbul, Dubai, Cairo, Johannesburg, Toronto, Brasilia, Mexico City, Lima, Buenos Aires, Bogota, Caracas and Santiago; Editing by Ross Finley and Hugh Lawson)

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Thu, October 26 2017. 10:43 IST