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Saturday, 9 March 2013

Global Economy: World growth update

Posted on 09:46 by Unknown
by Michael Roberts

February’s data for gauging the strength of the world economy is now available.  Readers of this blog will know that I use certain monthly indicators to get a ‘high frequency’ picture of the world economy.  I use the so-called Purchasing Managers Indexes (PMIs), which are basically surveys drawn from company managers about their corporate purchases in each month – things like new orders, employment, wages, prices and production.
Starting with the US, I have compiled a composite index of the PMI for manufacturing companies with the PMI for services  companies.  This is how it looks.
US ISM
As you can see, the US economy remains in a low-growth path with some signs of a pick-up.  The US is certainly nowhere near a new recession.  However, the impact of the increased taxes being imposed after Congress agreed a hike last January and the reductions in government spending coming from the so-called ‘sequester’ are likely to hit growth over the year by as much 1% pt of real GDP.  We’ll see what that does to the data.
An even more frequent indicator of US economic activity is the weekly ECRI that looks at a number of high-frequency measures including stock market prices and interest rates.  This also shows the US economy comfortably moving along a low growth path, but still not near boom levels.
ECRI weekly
And just yesterday, we got the monthly jobs figures for the US.  The headline data looked stronger.  There was an increase in overall US employment of 236,000 and the unemployment rate fell from 7.9% to 7.7%.  The accompanying survey of US households about their employment found that jobs had risen 170,000.  But here is the rub.  This increase was actually in part-time, low-paid jobs which were up 446,000, while full-time jobs fell 276,000.  Just under 300,000 left the labour force (i.e. they were no longer looking for a job) and this explains the fall in the unemployment rate.  Long-term unemployment (27 weeks or more) rose by 89,000, the first increase since October.  And when you compare the rate of recovery in employment since the end of the Great Recession, this is the weakest post-war turnaround of all employment recoveries.  After over five years, employment is still 2% below its pre-slump peak, and at current rates of net new jobs, it could take another 18 months to get back to that peak.
EmployRecFeb2013
Both the employment-to-population ratio and the labour force participation rate are much lower than they ought to be.  As one commentator put it, “it’s important to ensure that the unemployed get jobs. But in many ways it’s even more important to try to create jobs for people who simply aren’t working, rather than just for the people who are actively looking for work.”  There are 89.3 million Americans who are not in the labour force, of whom 6.8 million currently want a job. The economy ought to be able to find good, rewarding jobs not only for the 6.8 million, but for a large chunk of the other 82.5 million as well. And that is not happening.
EmployPopFeb2013
What about the rest of the world?  Well, the PMI for the world as a whole is still above 50, the point at which an economy rises.  It is rising relatively strongly in the US and China, as we know.  Even the UK is expanding on the PMI measure.  So a ‘triple-dip’ recession for the UK is not on the cards based on the February PMI.  But the Eurozone and Japan economies remain well in recession mode.
PMIS
The overall Eurozone figure came as Ireland, Spain, Italy and even Germany saw their individual country PMIs worsen between the first and second months of the new year.  Italy saw its all-sector PMI slide from 45.2 to 44.2, deep below 50, Spain’s PMI dipped from 46.5 to 45.3 and France’s only managed to inch up, from 42.7 to 43.1. By contrast, German business activity was on the rise, even though the PMI index fell from January’s 54.4 to 53.3 in February.

The world economy crawls along, with the US and China leading the way and Japan and Europe struggling along behind.
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