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US and eurozone growth gap set to increase

Investment Insights • MFN

3 min read

US and eurozone growth gap set to increase

In the recent update of its World Economic Outlook publication, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) forecast much stronger GDP growth in 2024 in the US than in the eurozone. In this Macro Flash Note, Senior Economist GianLuigi Mandruzzato looks at the growth outlook, its drivers, and the implications for monetary policy in the two areas.

GianLuigi Mandruzzato
GianLuigi Mandruzzato

One of the salient points in the April update of the IMF's World Economic Outlook (WEO) is the divergent trend of the revisions to expected growth in 2024 in the US and in the eurozone. Compared to the January forecast, US GDP growth is revised upwards by 0.6 percentage points (pp) while that of the eurozone is lowered 0.1 pp.

As often happens, the new IMF estimates crystallize trends that market participants have already grasped. Since mid-2023, the median GDP forecast of analysts surveyed by Bloomberg has progressively risen for the US but has instead fallen for the eurozone (see Chart 1a). These developments raise the questions of what is behind the growth divergence and whether such a gap is unusual.

Chart 1a. Market expectations on 2024 GDP growth

chart 1a.png

Source: Bloomberg, LSEG Data & Analytics and EFGAM calculations. Data as at 21 April 2024.

In answering the first question, the role of fiscal policy stands out.1 Although moderating compared to the pandemic years, the IMF expects the US government primary deficit, defined as the total deficit excluding interest spending, will remain close to 7% of GDP in 2024.2 In addition, in an election year it cannot be ruled out that the Biden administration will approve further expansionary measures. Conversely, in the eurozone the primary deficit is expected to be around 2.5% of GDP this year, reflecting a return to enforcement of the Stability and Growth Pact.3

Chart 1b. US-eurozone growth and real interest rate gaps

chart 1b.png

Source: Bloomberg, LSEG Data & Analytics and EFGAM calculations. Data as at 21 April 2024. Pandemic related observations were intentionally removed.

The answer to the second question is that a gap in annual GDP growth of more than 3 pp, as occurred in 2023, has already been recorded since the launch of the eurozone in 1999. However, the gap has previously narrowed rapidly after reaching such a high level (see Chart 1b). Yet the results of the March ISM and PMI surveys point to a further widening of the gap in the first half of 2024. We estimate that in the first two quarters of the year GDP growth will be equal to 0.6% and 0.7% quarter-on-quarter in the US as opposed to 0% and 0.1% quarter-on-quarter in the eurozone (see Charts 3a and b).4

Chart 2a (LHS). US GDP and forecast confidence bands (QoQ)
Chart 2b (RHS). Eurozone GDP and forecast confidence bands (QoQ)

2ab.png

Source: SEG Data & Analytics and EFGAM calculations. Data as at 21 April 2024.

The model forecasts point to three interesting observations. The first is that compared to the IMF forecasts and the consensus of market analysts, the risks are that GDP growth in 2024 could be stronger in the US and weaker in the eurozone. The second is that based on the probability distributions of the models' forecasts, a technical recession in the eurozone in the first half of 2024 may occur with a one in five chance.5 Yet, the third observation is that despite the lingering risk of recession, eurozone GDP growth should improve in Q2 2024 after six quarters of stagnation.

In conclusion, the expectation that the US economy will grow at a much stronger rate than the eurozone in 2024 has firmed in recent months, reflecting, among other factors, a more expansionary US fiscal policy. Growth estimates for the first half of the year based on business surveys point to a significant risk that the growth gap between the two areas will be higher than markets expect. If this forecast materialises, it would be natural to expect that, in the coming months, the eurozone monetary policy stance, measured as the real interest rate deflated by the change in core prices in the previous twelve months, will become relatively more expansionary compared to the US than markets discount (see Chart 1b).


1 Other factors, such as demographics and the lower dependence of the US on China, help to explain the growth differential between the two areas.
2 To measure the fiscal policy stance, reference is made to the primary balance not adjusted for the cycle given the uncertainty of estimates on potential GDP due to the impact of the pandemic on the economic cycle.
3 The Stability and Growth Pact was temporarily suspended from 2020 to 2023 to respond to the emergencies of the pandemic and the war in Ukraine.
4 The quarterly GDP change is forecast using a simple statistical model based on the monthly ISM indices in the US and PMI indices in the eurozone for the manufacturing and services sectors. The model sample spans from 1998Q1 to 2023Q4, excluding the quarters affected by the pandemic. Instead of using quarterly averages of the ISM and PMI indices, different models are separately estimated using the three monthly observations of each quarter. This approach exploits the different information content of the monthly surveys among firms for quarterly GDP growth. Statistical tests have shown that the out-of-sample forecasting power of this approach is superior to using quarterly averages of ISM and PMI data
5 Since the models do not consider lagged observations of the dependent variable, the forecasts of the different models are independent of each other, and it is possible to calculate the joint probability that the quarterly change in GDP is negative in both forecasting periods.

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