126
Finland The expansion is projected to continue to lose momentum, with GDP growth edging down to around 1%. Exports are set to weaken, mainly reflecting a deteriorating global environment, and housing investment will slow from recent high rates. Despite a sharp fall in job creation, unemployment should remain unchanged as labour force growth stalls. Fiscal policy is currently neutral but will appropriately become expansionary in 2020, with the budget deficit widening to 11/2 per cent of GDP in 2020-21. Promoting employment by enhancing work incentives, particularly for older workers and young women, and advancing productivity-reviving reforms are essential to boost growth and improve the fiscal position. Growth is slowing Economic growth slowed to 1.2% (year-on-year) by mid-2019, reflecting weakening private consumption and residential and business investment. Both consumer and business confidence have fallen, weighed down by the deteriorating global economic outlook and the downturn in the labour market – the unemployment rate has started rising again after having fallen steadily since 2016. The number of building permits issued has plunged, pointing to further declines in residential investment from near record levels. Export growth was strong early this year owing to temporary large ship deliveries, but is slowing due to the sluggish growth in key export markets. Inflation is rising as a tighter labour market pushes up wages.
Finland Employment growth has slowed sharply Y-o-y % changes 3.5
Y-o-y % changes 18
20
12
Unemployment rate →
3.0
← Employment
2.5
Residential investment growth is slowing
Y-o-y % changes 25
15
6
2.0
10
1.5
5
0
1.0
0
-6
0.5
-5
0.0
-10
-0.5
-15
Real residential investment
-1.0
-20
Housing permits¹
-1.5
2015
2016
2017
2018
-25 2019
-12 -18
0
2013
2015
2017
2019
-24 2021
-30
1. Year-on-year percentage changes of 3-month cumulated flows. Source: OECD Economic Outlook 106 database; and Statistics Finland. StatLink 2 https://doi.org/10.1787/888934045335
OECD ECONOMIC OUTLOOK, VOLUME 2019 ISSUE 2: PRELIMINARY VERSION © OECD 2019