128
Euro area Economic growth is expected to remain subdued, due to weak external demand and low business confidence, which weighs on private investment. Moderate support to economic activity will come from private consumption, underpinned by a robust labour market, with unemployment declining slightly further and wage growth firming up modestly. Core inflation will pick up only gradually from low levels. Monetary policy is set to remain very accommodative and a slightly expansionary fiscal stance is expected. The large external surplus will decline very slightly. Delaying monetary policy normalisation until the economy is on course to attain the inflation objective is appropriate. As investment and growth potential still display the scars from the crisis, a combined fiscal and structural policy effort is called for. Countries with low public debt should expand public investment, which would address infrastructure gaps and generate positive spillovers across the euro area. All countries should pursue structural reforms to make product markets more competitive, especially in services and network industries. Faster advances in completing the banking union and in developing common fiscal tools would reinforce the capacity of the euro area to resist the next crisis.
Euro area 1 The labour market is robust % of labour force 13
Inflation remains subdued Y-o-y % changes 4.0
Y-o-y % changes 4 Headline inflation²
12
3.5
11
3.0
10
2.5
9
2.0
8
1.5
7
Core inflation²
3
2 0 1
1.0
0
← Unemployment rate
6 5
0.5
Wages¹ →
2007
2009
2011
2013
2015
2017
0.0
2010
2012
2014
2016
2018
2020
-1
1. Nominal wages per employee. 2. Harmonised consumer price indices, net of energy and food products for core inflation. Source: OECD Economic Outlook 105 database. StatLink 2 https://doi.org/10.1787/888933934299
OECD ECONOMIC OUTLOOK, VOLUME 2019 ISSUE 1: PRELIMINARY VERSION © OECD 2019