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There’s More to Be Not-So-Thankful For: World Economy This Week

Published 11/22/2018, 07:01 PM
Updated 11/22/2018, 07:20 PM
© Reuters.  There’s More to Be Not-So-Thankful For: World Economy This Week

(Bloomberg) -- Markets were in meltdown mode this week, stressed by softer corporate earnings, ongoing U.S.-China tensions, and the still-strong prospects of a Federal Reserve interest-rate hike just in time for Christmas.

The Fed’s job is sure to get a whole lot more complicated even after this next decision, and the global economic picture isn’t helping: If you freaked out about Japan and Germany and the broader euro area slowing in the third quarter, you might want to mind a few more GDP losses this week in Israel, Chile, and Thailand.

Here’s our weekly wrap of what’s going on in the world economy.

Fed, We Hardly Knew Ye

There are a slew of fresh question marks around the Fed’s December plans, with pricing of interest-rate probabilities sliding amid signals that the U.S. economy is shifting into lower gear. Add to that: the New York Fed chief’s remark that they’ll probably raise rates “somewhat,” and more skepticism of a happy ending for U.S.-China talks (more on that later). It’ll only get tougher from there.

There was also a loud peanut gallery this week to rattle central bankers. U.S. President Donald Trump took his Fed criticisms further, promoting a cut in interest rates. The Reserve Bank of India engaged government officials who have their own plans for the central bank, which underlined the populist pressure that’s also cropped up from Italy and Turkey of late.

Read More:

  • Professor Pokes Raw Nerve at BOJ With New Take on Negative Rates
  • Bank of Canada Plans Thorough Review of Inflation Targeting
  • Pakistan Extends Talks After Failing to Reach IMF Loan Deal
  • China Central Bank Needs Regular Media Briefings, IMF Paper Says

Biggest of Losers

If Vegas were betting on trade-war winners, the odds for the U.S. would have faded this week – though China’s aren’t any better, either. The two sides are even less likely to make nice at the G-20 in Buenos Aires at month’s end, having thwarted APEC’s attempt at even a token joint statement last week’s gathering. The U.S. VP doubled down on China attacks, the U.S. Trade Representative stepped up charges on IP theft, and President Xi Jinping headed to Philippines to embrace a new pal. And it’s hard to find a winner on the straight economic battleground, even as the U.S. has been breaking away from China’s path. Xi is clamoring for a lending boost to the private sector at the same time that debt remains a systemic danger. Here’s a chart-heavy rundown of the Xi economy.

Read More:

  • China Is Paying for Most of Trump’s Trade War, Research Says
  • Malaysia, Japan Among Nations That Benefit From Trade War
  • Slowing Korean Export Growth Raises Red Flag on Global Trade

Simmering EU

Last week’s drama for U.K. Prime Minister Theresa May bled into this week as she shuttles between London and Brussels for tweaks to a hugely unpopular Brexit plan. May won some support from the Bank of England boss, with a push for a longer transition, and the central bank is set to release a fuller analysis next week. The stalemate is similarly sticky between the EU and Rome, though Mario Draghi has a secret weapon inside Italy’s ruling party.

Read More:

  • London’s Stockpile of Unsold Homes Jumps Almost 50% to a Record
  • Macron Renews Call for European Unity Amid Warnings of Threats
  • What About a Brexit Rerun? Careless Referendums Come at Big Cost

Weekend Reading

  • Trump's New Nafta Faces Roadblocks in Congress
  • Maldives, Wooed by India, Set to Scrap China Deal, Reports Say
  • China Has an Achilles’ Heel: Undereducation
  • Amid Hong Kong’s Riches, Poverty Isn’t Receding
  • Emerging-Market Watchers’ Obsession With Current Account Bites
  • How Policy Changes Kept America’s Silver Workforce On The Job
  • Spain Insight: Return of Economic Escapees Makes Room for Growth
  • Our Guide to Win the Economy Debate at a Family Gathering

Chart of the Week

How Italy Sparked a Standoff Over EU’s Budget Rules

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