Business World

The global economic recovery has slowed from a bounce to a grind

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THE BEST is already over for a global economic recovery that started off at a sprint and is turning into a slog.

That ’s the warning from Wall Street economists heading into the final months of a traumatic year. Some $ 20 trillion of stimulus from government­s and central banks has pulled the world’s economies most of the way back to pre-pandemic levels. But for multiple reasons, the last stretch is set to be the hardest.

LAST YARD HARD

Policy makers could dial back the fiscal support that’s been key to recovery — as they’ve already done in the US Temporary job cuts may harden into permanent ones, a worry compounded this week when corporate giants Walt Disney Co. and Royal Dutch Shell Plc fired tens of thousands of workers. And the virus itself is spreading faster, and forcing government­s to reimpose lockdowns, as cold weather arrives.

“We’re getting past the phase where we’re rebounding from the shutdown,” Ethan Harris, Bank of America Corp.’s head of global economic research, said on Bloomberg Television. “Now we’re more into the grinding forward phase.”

All these risks have made investors less bullish than they’ve been since the early weeks of the coronaviru­s crisis. The S& P 500 Index declined in September after five straight monthly advances, and Europe’s Stoxx 600 also pared gains.

The good news is that the world economy proved more resilient in a global health crisis than many had feared, thanks to a rapid policy response. Government­s subsidized incomes and helped companies stay a f loat , whi le cent ra l banks cut interest rates and ensured that stressed financial markets remained liquid.

Deutsche Bank AG, which back in May was warning of a 5.9% slide in global GDP ( gross domestic product) this year, now reckons the contractio­n will be limited to 3.9%.

AUSTERITY AGAIN?

But that would still amount to the deepest slump in generation­s. And it’s not clear how much more government­s are willing to borrow and spend to complete the recovery.

Fiscal stimulus added 3.7 percentage points of growth to global GDP this year, according to JPMorgan Chase & Co. But the bank’s economists expect policy makers to repeat the mistakes they made after the 2008 financial crisis, and pivot prematurel­y to austerity — turning this year’s boost into a 2.4- point fiscal drag next year.

In the US, economists have been cutting fourth- quarter growth forecasts because they fear that efforts to pass another coronaviru­s spending bill have stalled in Congress, though a deal remains possible before November’s presidenti­al election.

In Europe, where the virus spurred leaders to overcome deep disagreeme­nts about pooling their budget resources, a historic € 1.8 trillion ($ 2.1 trillion) recovery fund — seen as crucial for struggling countries like Italy and Spain — now faces potential delays.

The upside surprises to the economic rebound are slowly fading. Further damping hopes of a Vshaped recovery is the accelerati­ng spread of the virus and the absence of a vaccine. Government­s are reluctant to go back into full lockdown, aware of the devastatio­n it could wreak on businesses. But many parts of Europe, including the UK have re-imposed some curbs.

Wit h t he i r re v enue s squeezed, businesses could face problems repaying debts — leading to more bankruptci­es, and making lenders more reluctant to extend credit even to viable firms. And the longer social- distancing regimes are in place, the more likely it is that companies will decide the drop in demand for their goods or services is a permanent phenomenon, not a temporary one — and shrink their workforce.

WHAT BLOOMBERG’S ECONOMISTS SAY

A rising case count in some major advanced and emerging market economies, depleted fiscal stimulus in the US, and a vaccine that’s still months away add up to an uncertain outlook for the global economy. The easy strides of the recovery are over. The months ahead will be a harder slog.

TOM ORLIK, CHIEF ECONOMIST

That’s already happening in several industries. In recent days, Disney announced plans to ax 28,000 workers, Shell said it may cut as many as 9,000, and Germany’s Continenta­l AG approved a restructur­ing plan that will abolish or shift 30,000 jobs worldwide.

As some pandemic job-losses become permanent, the recovery in labor markets is slowing. In the US, applicatio­ns for unemployme­nt benefits remain elevated at about four times last year’s levels, and a key report on Friday will probably show payrolls growth slowed in September.

Some countries are at least seeing encouragin­g virus data — especially China, where the disease first spread. The world’s second- biggest economy has managed to bring the pandemic under control, and get further along the road to recovery than most peers, even if several indicators suggest it’s starting to plateau.

But there are other risks besides the pandemic world economy. Business confidence is at the whim of geopolitic­s, as the US prepares to vote and its trade tensions with China simmer. The UK’s trade negotiatio­ns with the European Union ( EU) are in flux, with a hard Brexit still a risk.

“Our base case is still for some improvemen­t in the economy,” said Kathy Jones, chief fixed income strategist for the Schwab Center for Financial Research. “We’re walking a fine line.” —

“We’re getting past the phase where we’re rebounding from the shutdown,” Ethan Harris, Bank of America Corp.’s head of global economic research, said on Bloomberg Television. “Now we’re more into the grinding forward phase.”

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