Luxembourg projection note OECD Economic Outlook November 2022

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Luxembourg Luxembourg’s economic growth is set to slow to 1.5% in 2023, before picking up again in 2024. Activity has slowed due to broadening inflationary pressures, falling manufacturing activity, and the uncertain outlook on the back of the Russian war of aggression against Ukraine. Financial services growth will slow in 2023 and high interest rates will delay business investment and housing purchases. Government support to households will underpin incomes and spending. Annual public investment of 4% of GDP will continue into 2024. The labour market will remain tight despite the growth slowdown. Rising prices of services will lift core inflation. Income support to households should be targeted on the most vulnerable, be limited in time to avoid raising domestic demand pressures, and designed to preserve incentives to save energy. Reforms to the wage indexation system should be undertaken in consultation with the social partners to take account of the productivity, employment and investment effects. To enhance resilience, economic diversification requires stepping up investments in R&D, ICT and the transition to a low-carbon economy. The economy is slowing After a buoyant start to the year supported by the end of lock-down restrictions, the economy has slowed amidst rising uncertainty and inflation, exacerbated by the war in Ukraine. Retail trade volumes rose by 2.1% year on year in the first eight months of 2022, and employment remains robust. The unemployment rate stood at 4.8% in September 2022. Nonetheless, consumer confidence has fallen to its lowest point since 2002, as high inflation and interest rates weigh on sentiment. Business confidence has fallen from a high in early 2022 and manufacturing and residential construction activity have slowed. Consumer price inflation eased to 8.8% in October from a peak of 10.6% in June. Inflation was initially driven by energy prices, but price pressures are broadening, with core inflation rising to 5.2%. House price inflation has remained high. Salaries in the second quarter were 7.8% higher than a year earlier, after automatic indexation increased all wages and social benefits by 2.5% on 1 April.

Luxembourg

Source: Eurostat, Consumer Prices database; Statec, Business opinion survey in services; European Commission, Consumer confidence indicator; and Refinitiv. StatLink 2 https://stat.link/eiaym4

OECD ECONOMIC OUTLOOK, VOLUME 2022 ISSUE 2: PRELIMINARY VERSION © OECD 2022


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