Showing posts with label Canada. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Canada. Show all posts

Monday, 14 July 2014

Composite Leading Indicators Suggest Stable Growth In The OECD

The OECD Composite Leading Indicators (CLIs) continue to suggest stable growth momentum in the OECD. CLIs are designed to anticipate turning points in economic activity relative to trend.

The US, Canada and the UK CLIs show stable growth momentum and in the UK growth is stabilising at rates above the trend. The CLI for Japan shows an interruption in the growth momentum although it is probably only a temporary effect. The CLIs for the euro area as a whole and for Italy in particular indicate a positive change in momentum. Germany may be losing some of its momentum but it is at a high level.

In the BRICS emerging economies, Brazil's CLI points to below trend growth, China and Russia are growing around the trend and India may be returning to faster growth with a CLI suggesting a positive turning point.

Friday, 7 December 2012

International Merchandise Trade Slow Again

Most of the major economies experienced a continuation of the slowdown in merchandise trade seen in the second quarter in the third quarter of 2012 according to data from the OECD. Imports and exports fell in Brazil, Germany, Italy, Japan, Russia, S.Africa and the US. Imports also decreased in France and the UK. Moderate export growth occurred in France and the UK. Exports fell in Canada, China and India. Imports grew moderately in Canada and China but there was stronger growth in India.

Friday, 23 November 2012

Signs Of Weak Growth Prospects In OECD CLI's

The composite leading indicators of the OECD suggest there may be weak growth prospects in major economies. The CLIs for Japan, Germany, France and the Euro Area pont to weak growth but there are signs of stabilisation in other economies such as Canada, China and the US and possibly Italy as well. Weak growth signs also appear in India and Russia.

OECD Inflation Up To 2.2%

Annual inflation in the OECD area increased to 2.2% in September 2012 from 2.1% in August according to data from the OECD. Higher energy prices, at 5.1% increase, were the main cause of the slight increase. Food prices slowed to 2.1% in September after an increase of 2.2% in August.If food and energy atre excluded OECD inflation was 1.6% compared with 1.7% in August. Euro area inflation in September was 2.6%. In the UK it fell from 2.5% in August to 2.2% and in the US it increased to 2% from 1.7% and remained stable in Canada and Italy. Inflation also fell in France and Germany.

Wednesday, 11 April 2012

OECD GDP Growth Slows But Stays Positive

Real GDP growth in the OECD countries slowed down to 0.2% in Q4 2011 compared to 0.6% growth in Q3. The major components were all included except for changes in inventories. There was slower growth in private consumption, investment and net exports but they remained positive. Government consumption was the main contributor to the slowdown decreasing growth by 0.1%.

The broad based slowdown in demand differed at national level reflecting amongst other things differences in rates of economic growth. GDP growth was strongest in the US at 0.7% largely due to private consumption. Private consumption was also the main driver in Canada which showed growth on 0.4%. France remained positive at 0.2%. Japan and Germany both reported negative growth of 0.2%. Other countries with negative GDP growth in Q4 2011 included Italy -0.7% and the UK with 0.3%

Tuesday, 8 November 2011

Inflation In The OECD Continues To Rise In September

Consumer prices in the OECD countries continued to rise in September by 3.3% after a 3.2% increase in August. It is the highest rate since October 2008. The 5.2% rise in inflation in the UK in September was mainly due to the 18.1% rise in energy prices in September after a 12.3% rise in August. It is back to the peak of September 2008, the highest since records began in January 1997. Consumer price inflation also increased in Italy (3%), Germany (2.6%), the US (3.9%) and Canada (3.2%). In France prices remained stable but in Japan prices fell by 0.2% to 0%. In Europe, the HICP increased to 3%.

Friday, 23 September 2011

Falls In UK Productivity Levels

Productivity per worker in the UK fell relative to all G7 countries except Italy and Germany in 2010, but it was above that of Japan and similar to Canada. The productivity gap between the UK and the US is the biggest since 1994. All G7 countries have seen an increase in GDP per worker and GDP per hour between 2009 and 2010. UK productivity was lower than the G7 average on both measures. GDP per worker was lower than in France, Italy and the US (the highest in G7).

All G7 countries experienced productivity growth in GDP per hour worked in 2010. In the UK growth was the result of a combination of a fall in actual hours worked and an increase in GDP. While the UK experienced a fall in hours worked per worker between 2009 and 2010 other countries saw a reduction in total hours as a result of lower employment.

The US saw the largest growth in GDP per worker of the G7 countries. The UK previously a fast growth country saw falls similar to those in Canada, France and Germany due to employment falling more slowly than GDP.

Saturday, 25 June 2011

OECD Inflation Continues to Increase

Consumer prices indices for the OECD countries continue to increase. The OECD CPI went up by 2.9% in April 2011 compared with 2.7% in March. Energy prices accounted for much of the increase with a 13.8% rise compared with 12.4% in March.

Inflation accelerated most in the UK with an increase to 4.5% and the US to 3.2%. Germany also experienced an acceleration of inflation to 2.4%. France's inflation rose to 2.1% and Italy's to 2.6%. Canada remained stable at 3.3%. The euro area inflation (HICP) was at 2.8% in May from 2.7% in April.

The latest figures from Eurostat suggest that euro area inflation was back to 2.7% again in May with EU inflation at 3.2%.

OECD CLI Suggest Slow Down In Recovery

The Composite Leading Indicators (CLIs) published by the OECD for April 2011 suggest a slight loss of momentum in most major economies with the US the exception. Stability in the pace of expansion was suggested in Germany and the UK but France, Italy and Canada show signs of a slowdown. Signs of a slowdown also appear in China, Brazil, India and Russia.

Wednesday, 13 October 2010

CLI Shows Signs Of A Peak In US Economy

The OECD composite leading indicators for August suggest that economic expansion is continuing to slow down. The CLI decreased by 0.1 point in August for the fourth month in a row. A downturn is expected in Canada, France, UK, Italy, Brazil, India and China. Expansion is indicated for Germany, Japan and Russia. The US is showing signs of a peak in economic activity.

OECD Unemployment Fell In August

The unemployment rate in the OECD countries fell by 8.5% in August from 8.6% in July. Unemployment appears to be stable across OECD countries. In the US unemployment remained the same as last month and it fell in Canada. It is still near its highest post-war levels.

Wednesday, 15 September 2010

Moderate Growth Expected In OECD

The latest OECD composite leading indicators statistics signify a moderation in the rate of expansion compared to last month. The index for the OECD was down 0.1 in July 2010.

The downturn predicted for Canada, France, Italy, UK, China and India means that the signs suggest a slower rate of economic growth than was anticipated for last month. The outlook for Brazil, US and Japan is that they will possibly peak and their expansion may lose momentum. The German and Russian economies are expected to expand as are the OECD and the Euro areas. The OECD area last peaked in February 2008 and troughed in May 2009 along with the Euro area which last peaked in March 2008.

Wednesday, 1 September 2010

OECD Inflation Up To 1.6% In July

Consumer prices in OECD countries increased by 1.6% in the year to July 2010 from 1.5% in June. The increase is mainly due to energy and food prices developments which saw increases of 6.2% and 1.1% respectively. In terms of percentage price increases on the previous month, prices increased by 0.5% in Canada, 0.4% in Italy and 0.3% in Germany but fell by 0.5% in Japan and 0.3% in France and the UK. On the same month in the previous year prices increased by 3.1% in the UK, 1.8% in Canada and 1.7% in France and Italy and fell by 0.9% in Japan. The euro area increased by 1.7% and the EU by 2.1%.

Friday, 23 July 2010

Expansion Slowdown Expected To Continue

The slowdown in economic expansion is set to continue according to the OECD Composite Leading Indicators for May 2010. The deceleration continued into the 10th month with an increase of 0.1% point.

France, Italy, China and India seem to have reached a peak in the growth cycle and signs of a peak are emerging in Canada the UK and Brazil. Ongoing expansion is still taking place in Germany, Japan, the US and Russia but at a slower pace. The ASEAN coutries are generally gaining momentum of recovery.