122
Euro area Growth is projected to remain subdued, with little prospects of a recovery over the coming two years. Modest growth in external demand, global trade tensions and policy uncertainty will limit the pick-up in exports and business investment. Household saving is expected to continue to rise, further weakening the prospects for demand growth. Inflation will remain low. Very accommodative monetary policy is appropriate given the weakness of expected inflation, but a sustainable resumption of growth and a durable return of inflation to target will require further fiscal easing as well. Taking advantage of the enhanced fiscal space afforded by very low interest rates, public investment should increase in countries with low public debt, inter alia to support climate change mitigation and longterm economic growth. A fresh impulse towards stronger European integration, notably by deepening the single market, completing the banking union and developing common fiscal tools, would foster resilience and productivity growth. The slowdown is becoming entrenched The euro area economy has slowed further in the course of 2019. Continued deterioration in external demand, persistent global trade tensions and enduring uncertainty surrounding Brexit have severely hampered exports. Investment weakness has also tended to worsen. The labour market has remained robust, with further reductions in unemployment and the continuation of moderate wage dynamism, which has translated into purchasing power gains given subdued inflation. However, growth in private consumption has somewhat declined, reflecting higher household saving, probably related to precautionary saving in a context of rising uncertainties. Manufacturing has been hit hardest by the slowdown, but confidence in services has also shown signs of faltering.
Euro area 1 Confidence is falling, especially in manufacturing 50 = neutral 65
The labour market remains strong % of labour force 13
Manufacturing PMI Services PMI¹
60 55 50 45 40
12
3.5
11
3.0
10
2.5
9
2.0
8
1.5
7
35 30
Y-o-y % changes 4.0
1.0 ← Unemployment rate
6 2007
2009
2011
2013
2015
2017
2019
0
5
0.5
Wages² →
2007
2009
2011
2013
2015
2017
2019
0.0
1. Private service sector firms. 2. Nominal wages per employee. Source: IHS Markit; and OECD Economic Outlook 106 database. StatLink 2 https://doi.org/10.1787/888934045297
OECD ECONOMIC OUTLOOK, VOLUME 2019 ISSUE 2: PRELIMINARY VERSION © OECD 2019