Is a Global Recession likely in 2023?

2023 has been characterized by a more optimistic outlook than last year. Central banks have been forced to revise previously gloomy prognoses for their economies, with rising activity in most major countries. Easing inflationary pressures, the reopening of China and the surprise strength of countries such as Japan have been galvanizing forces for the global economy and the prospect of recession has receded.

In particular, supply side factors have improved economic fortunes. Energy and food prices have eased, supply chains have unclogged, and labour shortages have normalized. The services sector has revived after significant weakness during the pandemic, as consumers across the world have started to travel, eat out, and shop. Major spending programmers, from the Inflation Reduction Act in the US, to RePower EU in Europe, have also helped compensate for tightening monetary policy.

However, some worrying signs have emerged more recently. There have been tentative indications of sliding economic activity across Europe and the US, with deteriorating PMI data and consumer weakness. Europe’s goods sector has been a particularly vulnerable spot. Fulcrum’s estimates suggest an annualized growth rate of only 0.2% for the Eurozone.

Germany’s industrial weakness

Germany’s once-resilient industrial sector has been at the heart of this decline. According to PMI business surveys, this sector has now clearly moved towards recession, and is dragging the national economy in the same direction. While this was understandable amid an energy crisis, its weakness has not reversed as commodity prices have dropped. It is contending with a toxic combination of imported cars from China (stealing market share from German auto manufacturers), the legacy of high energy costs, and the impact of US government subsidies for specific sectors.