OECD
sees slowing or stable growth in emerging economies flat in major developing
economies with the exception of India while the outlook for most developed
economies is stable and improving in the United States, the OECD said on
Tuesday.
The
Paris-based Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development said its
leading indicator covering 33 member countries was unchanged for the sixth
month in a row at 100.6, above its long-term average of 100.
The
indicator, designed to
flag turning points in the economic cycle, pointed to
stable growth momentum in the OECD area as a whole.
In
the United States, growth momentum was above a long-term average at 100.6, its
third consecutive month of improvement, while Britain's economy was above trend
at 101.13 and improving for the fourth consecutive month.
Italy's
growth momentum was improving strongly to 101.74 while the reading for France
was stable at 100.33, with a slight improvement from the previous month.
However,
growth momentum was above average but flagging in Japan with a reading of
100.40, possibly due to a one-off tax increase. In Germany the reading was
100.48, its fifth consecutive month of decline.
Among
major developing economies, growth momentum was slowing or near stable with
readings slightly below 100.
China's
growth prospects had improved slightly to 99.25 from 99.10 the previous month,
while India showed tentative signs of stronger momentum with a reading of
98.22.
Reuters
No comments:
Post a Comment