Friday, September 23, 2011

24/09/2011: Projected trends in economic growth for 2011

In the previous post I covered the current results for Q2 2011 QNA for Ireland. As promised, here, I will focus on forward-looking signals emerging from H1 2011 data.

Please note, though I do use the term 'forecast' below, the results shown here are really more projections than formal forecasts. The difference is very important. I use data through Q2 2011 to estimate what the economy performance is likely to be, assuming no change on the trends established in H1 2011. Of course, this is subject to significant risks (identified below).


Based on Q2 2011 (preliminary - and I stress this) data, chart below shows my forecast for 2011 growth:
Using simple forward forecast based on Q1 20003 - Q2 2011 data, we can now expect:
  • Agriculture, Forestry and Fishing sector real output to grow by ca 5.5-5.6% this year, well in excess of 2010 growth of 0.7%, lifting sector output closer to €3.2bn in 2011 or 3.2% ahead of 2007 (the peak year for GDP and GNP).
  • Industry, including construction, is expected to expand by 5.0-5.1% this year, slightly below 5.2% growth rate achieved in 2009. This will put sector output in real terms 2,9% ahead of the pre-crisis peak of 2007.
  • However, industry performance will come against continued double digit contraction in Building & Construction sub-sector, which is expected to shrink 17-18.5% in 2011, compounding an astonishing 30.1% decline in 2010. Bu the end of this year, the sub-sector output can be 61.3% below the level of pre-crisis peak year of 2007. Note, the peak for the sub-sector was back in 2004 and if things continue on trend, 2011 output will be a whooping 74% below that.
  • Distribution, transport & communications sector is likely to post another decline this year - shrinking by some 1.1-1.2% against a decline of 2% in 2010. Relative to economy's pre-crisis peak the sector is likely to be down 16.3% in 2011.
  • Public administration & defence sector will contract 2.4-2.5% in 2011, based on data through Q2 2011, compounding a 2.7% decline in 2010. The sector is likely to fall compounded 4.9% on 2007 and 9% on peak sector contribution in 2008.
  • Other services (including rents) - the sector accounting for 51% of our overall economic acitivity (GNP) is likely to post another contraction of -0.6-0.8% this year, compounding a 2.3% fall in 2010 and down 6.6% on 2007 peak.

Hence, GDP is expected to expand by 1.5-1.6% this year on the constant factor basis if we are to use the data from H1 2011, following 0.1% contraction in 2010. This will put our GDP somewhere around 5.6-5.7% below 2007 peak levels.

Taxes, net of subsidies are continuing to fall with 3.5-3.7% decline in 2010 now expected to be followed by 1.8% contraction in 2011. The end of 2011 taxes net of subsidies will likely come in at 32-33% below 2007 levels. This, of course, is driven by the twin forces of rising social welfare costs and continued presence of other substantial transfers, plus a reduced tax take.

With this, overall GDP (in constant market prices) can be expected to rise ca 1.1-1.3% in 2011, based on preliminary data through Q2 2011 (subject to revisions and also reflective of much more robust global economic conditions pre-July 2011 amplification of the crises). This will follow on a 0.4% decrease in 2010, leaving the gross real income 9% below 2007 levels.

Net factor income outflows to the rest of the world are likely to continue rising in 2011, growing 2.4-2.6% in 2011 (assuming amplified crisis conditions do not trigger signifcant withdrawals of retained profits), leaving factor outflows up 4.3% on 2007 levels.

With that, we can expect GNP to rise 0.8-1.0% in 2011, following on 0.3% growth in 2010 and national income will be 11.2% below 2007 peak levels.

Sectoral decomposition of national income by source, so far, stands at:
  • Agriculture, forestry and fishing - the flagship sector by subsidies received and attention paid to it (remember, RTE and Irish Times are so keen covering ploughing championships) - contribution to GNP will be a whooping 2.4% in 2011 a 'massive' jump on 2.3% in 2008 and 2009, but still below 2.8% average annual contribution in 2003-2005.
  • Industry (including Building & Construction) will be contributing 34.9% on GNP, up on 33.5% in 2010. If this materialises, 2011 will be the best year for Industry since 2003, which, incidentally, shows just how significant the growth in MNCs-led exports-oriented manufacturing was over recent years. As Building & Construction subsector contribution shrank from 9.9% at the peak in 2004 to 2.6% in 2011, manufacturing picked up the slack, pushing Industry overall contribution from 34.1% in 2004 to 34.9% - a swing of 8.1 percentage points.
  • Distribution, transport & communications sector contribution is currently running at 15.7%, behind 16.0% in 2010, and at the lowest levels since 2005.
  • Public administration and defence contribution to GNP is running at 4.2%, down from 4.4% in 2010, but still ahead of 3.9% in 2006 and 2007 and ahead of 4.0% annual average for 2003-2005. In 2003-2007 sector contribution average was also 4.0%, so our austerity so far is, in relative terms, seeing an increase in spending on public administration and defence as the share of the total economic pie. Now, these two functions are not front-line vital services, last time I checked, so you would expect a rational policy would be to shrink these sub-sectors at least at the speed of reduction in GNP. So far, this is not happening. Another alternative would be to reduce them at least at the rate of decline in taxes importance in the economy. This too is not happening, as shown below.
  • Other services are likely to contract in their importance in the economy in 2011 (to ca 51.1% of GNP) following a contraction from 53.5% in 2009 to 52.1% in 2010. Large share of these services are exportables, which highlights the fact that not all of our exporting activities are booming.
  • Taxes net of subsidies are likely to come in at 11.3% of GNP in 2011, down from 11.6% in 2010 and reaching the lowest level on the record since 2003. 2003-2007 average here is 14.5%, 2008-2010 average is 12.4%, so current state of taxes net of subsidies is worse than any recorded sub-period.
Again, to stress, one metric for sustainability of public spending would be to have public administration and defence spending contracting faster than the rate of contraction in taxes. And again, this is simply not happening. Since 2007 taxes have fallen from 15.0% of domestic economy to 11.3%. In the same period, public administration & defence contributions have increased from 3.9% to 4.2%.

Again, to stress, these 'forecasts' or rather 'projections' are based solely on preliminary figures for H1 2011. They are not strictly speaking forecasts, but rather annualized reflections of performance between January 2011 and June 2011. The risks to these are to the downside:
  • Decreasing rate of growth in the US and the euro area materialising since May-June 2011 is not reflected in the projections above
  • Signs of significant slowdown in broad leading economic indicators (PMIs, investment etc) are not reflected in the projections above, and
  • Preliminary data can see significant revisions in time - in Q1 2011, preliminary estimate for GNP decline was estimated at 4.3% and it was revised to 3.0% decline in the current release, so the swings can be quite significant.

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