Can the U.S. Economy Lead the World Economy in 2013? - Real Time Insight
09 October 2012 - 12:55AM
Zacks
This week, investors
get supplied with new IMF global GDP growth data. I am quite
interested to see this data. I think it will give us a
refresh on the global growth situation. These are the first
global growth numbers to come out after the latest Draghi moves to
buy debt and the announcement of Bernanke’s QE3.
The IMF’s World
Economic Outlook comes out on Tuesday, October
9.
The IMF’s Global
Financial Stability Report comes out on Wednesday, Oct
10.
Here are IMF GDP data
I pulled out of last quarter’s reports, done in July
2012.
All data will
be updated:
Advanced
Economies 2011
+1.6%
2012
+1.4% 2013
+1.9%
United States
2011 +1.7%
2012 +2.0%
2013
+2.3%
Euro Area
2011 +1.5%
2012 (-0.3%)
2013 +0.7%
China
2011 +9.2%
2012 +8.0%
2013
+8.5%
Open this nice IMF
tool to view the long-term global GDP growth
picture…
http://www.imf.org/external/datamapper/index.php
For its part, the
World Bank reported Monday, Oct. 8th that China should expand +7.7%
in 2012 and +8.1% in 2013. For China, this weaker World Bank
GDP data argues for a reduction in the coming IMF GDP growth
numbers.
My debate
questions?
(1) Is the U.S.
economy still going to show stronger real GDP growth in 2013?
Why or why not?
(2) Does U.S. GDP
growth push new macro support on China and
Europe?
(3) Can the U.S.
economy lead the major parts of the world economy in
2013?
AND
(4) Did (U.S. and
non-U.S.) equity markets already price in the new
data?
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