188
Norway Mainland GDP growth of 3.5% is projected for 2022, reflecting the final phase of recovery in the wake of the pandemic. In 2023, economic growth will have declined towards its long-term potential rate, at 1.7%. Risks to inflation are pronounced, given the broadening of large price increases and elevated uncertainties around commodity prices. The labour market, already tight, will add to pressures on wage inflation. House prices and household indebtedness remain high. Monetary policy normalisation should continue given the strength of demand and price inflation. A prudent approach to government budgeting is needed. Policies shielding households from sharp increases in energy bills should, in the longer term, aim to transition away from direct government support and should not distort incentives to energy saving. Further structural policy measures that facilitate housing supply and temper demand for home ownership are needed. Output growth remains strong The Omicron wave of COVID-19 only briefly paused strong growth in mainland output. Energy price increases have been the dominant influence on headline consumer price inflation, although these are partly offset by electricity price subsidies. Core inflation, which excludes energy, is picking up, reflecting a broadening of inflation to more goods and services, including travel-related services. The unemployment rate recorded in labour-force survey data has declined sharply. This reflects strong demand but also that inflows of temporary foreign workers have not yet returned to pre-pandemic levels. The tight labour market is creating upward pressure on wages. The negotiated benchmark wage increase for 2022 in the centralised wage bargaining system has been set at 3.7% and there is a risk wage increases may be higher than this, including in industries facing skill shortages.
Norway The rate of unemployment has fallen substantially
Core Inflation is rising
Unemployment rate, 15-74 year-olds
3-month m.a.
% of labour force, s.a. 6.0
m-o-m % changes, a.r., s.a. 10
Headline Core¹
5.5
8
5.0
6
4.5
4
4.0
2
3.5
0
3.0
-2
2.5
2019
2020
2021
0
0
2020
2021
-4 2022
1. Core inflation is Statistics Norway's CPI-ATE measure which adjusts for tax changes and excludes energy products. Source: OECD Economic Outlook 111 database; and Statistics Norway. StatLink 2 https://stat.link/6nesbz
OECD ECONOMIC OUTLOOK, VOLUME 2022 ISSUE 1: PRELIMINARY VERSION © OECD 2022