quarta-feira, 26 de julho de 2023

O Relatório do FMI Não Traz Boas Notícias

Crescimento global em queda, subida das taxas de juro (para combater a inflação) mas abrandamento da descida da inflação (as previsões para 2024 foram, aliás, revistas em alta) e ainda mais algumas "divergências"... Não se pode dizer que o FMI esteja optimista! Há, porém, quem "leia" neste relatório do FMI o afastamento do risco global de um colapso económico ainda este ano e, assim, se sinta aliviado...

FMI: The global recovery is slowing amid widening divergences among economic sectors and regions

Global growth is projected to fall from an estimated 3.5 percent in 2022 to 3.0 percent in both 2023 and 2024. While the forecast for 2023 is modestly higher than predicted in the April 2023 World Economic Outlook (WEO), it remains weak by historical standards. 


The rise in central bank policy rates to fight inflation continues to weigh on economic activity. Global headline inflation is expected to fall from 8.7 percent in 2022 to 6.8 percent in 2023 and 5.2 percent in 2024. Underlying (core) inflation is projected to decline more gradually, and forecasts for inflation in 2024 have been revised upward.

The recent resolution of the US debt ceiling standoff and, earlier this year, strong action by authorities to contain turbulence in US and Swiss banking reduced the immediate risks of financial sector turmoil. This moderated adverse risks to the outlook. However, the balance of risks to global growth remains tilted to the downside.

Inflation could remain high and even rise if further shocks occur, including those from an intensification of the war in Ukraine and extreme weather-related events, triggering more restrictive monetary policy. Financial sector turbulence could resume as markets adjust to further policy tightening by central banks. 

China’s recovery could slow, in part as a result of unresolved real estate problems, with negative cross-border spillovers. Sovereign debt distress could spread to a wider group of economies. On the upside, inflation could fall faster than expected, reducing the need for tight monetary policy, and domestic demand could again prove more resilient.

In most economies, the priority remains achieving sustained disinflation while ensuring financial stability. Therefore, central banks should remain focused on restoring price stability and strengthen financial supervision and risk monitoring.

Should market strains materialize, countries should provide liquidity promptly while mitigating the possibility of moral hazard. They should also build fiscal buffers, with the composition of fiscal adjustment ensuring targeted support for the most vulnerable. Improvements to the supply side of the economy would facilitate fiscal consolidation and a smoother decline of inflation toward target levels.

https://www.imf.org/en/Publications/WEO/Issues/2023/07/10/world-economic-outlook-update-july-2023

quinta-feira, 20 de julho de 2023

China: O Caso do Ministro Desaparecido...

No Sinocism, hoje, destaque para o desaparecimento do ministro dos Negócios Estrangeiros: 

"Andrew and Bill begin with the mystery surrounding foreign minister Qin Gang, who has not been seen in public since June 25th. As the foreign ministry stays silent, what might explain his retreat from public view, and how does this situation reflect on Xi Jinping and the party? Then: Henry Kissinger makes a surprise visit to Beijing, meets first with Defense Minister Li Shangfu, while John Kerry meets with Li Qiang and Wang Yi to talk common ground on climate issues. Will either of them get an audience with Xi? From there: U.S. chip firms lobby the executive branch, Chinese hackers access the emails of Secretary of Commerce Gina Raimondo, and the optics get trickier for Biden's China policy. At the end: Weak economic data for Q2 and a window into who's actually driving the changes to China's relationships with the West."



quinta-feira, 6 de julho de 2023

Cuba na Nova Guerra Fria China vs. USA

Cuba, México, Panamá: os "postos avançados" de Pequim


Do nosso amigo Giuseppe Gagliano, sobre os avanços chineses, a passos bem largos, numa nova guerra fria.

A China investiu pesadamente em instalações de espionagem em Cuba e negociou um acordo para treinar soldados chineses na ilha ...

Portugal: Falta de Estratégia e de Decisão

Lúcio Vicente Estamos a poucos dias de celebrar os 50 anos de Abril. Porém, Portugal é muito menos do que podia e devia ser. Os 123 mil milh...