Economic Conditions Snapshot, September 2016: McKinsey Global
Survey results
Executives
in emerging markets are newly optimistic for the future of their home
economies, while respondents globally expect stable conditions in the world economy.
For the first time since 2014, executives in emerging markets are more optimistic
about their home countries’ prospects than are their peers in developed
markets—and Latin America is a particular bright spot, according to McKinsey’s
latest survey on economic conditions.1Respondents
in the region, long the most downbeat on economic conditions at home, report
increasingly positive views on the state of their countries’ economies and are
among the most bullish on future conditions.
At the same time, executives in Latin
America report increasing concerns over political issues at home—none too
surprising, since Brazil’s Senate voted to impeach President Dilma Rousseff the
same week the survey was in the field. Political risks (specifically,
leadership transitions and domestic political conflicts) also top the overall
list of threats to domestic growth. Despite these risks, respondents predict
stability in the global economy in the coming months, with emerging-market
respondents again more positive than developed-market executives.
Newfound
optimism in emerging markets
When asked about economic conditions in
their home economies, executives tend to say conditions have stabilized and
will hold steady in the months ahead. The largest share of respondents (44
percent) say domestic conditions are the same now as six months ago, and 38
percent expect conditions at home will stay the same—or improve—over the next
few months.
On the whole, emerging-market executives
report a more positive outlook than they did in June and relative to their
peers in developed markets. This is the first survey since December 2014 in
which emerging-market respondents have been more optimistic than their peers
about their countries’ prospects.
Across emerging markets, responses from
Latin America suggest steadily climbing optimism. Executives in this region
have long been the most downbeat about the state of their home economies, but
the share believing that domestic conditions are better now than six months ago
has gradually risen. One year ago, only 5 percent of executives said conditions
had improved; now 26 percent—nearly even with the global average of 30
percent—report improvement .
Looking ahead, 51 percent in Latin America
believe conditions will improve in the coming months—a share that’s much
greater than the global average (38 percent) and second only to India, where 91
percent of executives expect better conditions. One year ago, just 13 percent
of respondents in Latin America expected improvements. Their peers in China
also are more optimistic than they’ve been in past surveys: 31 percent of
executives there predict improvements at home in the next six months, up from
18 percent in June.
Political
(and geopolitical) risks at the fore
On the list of risks to domestic growth,
political concerns have risen to the top overall and in Latin America (Exhibit
3). In Latin America—and during the week that Brazilian president Dilma
Rousseff was impeached—52 percent of executives cite domestic political
conflicts (up from 43 percent in June) as a risk to growth, and roughly one-third
cite political transitions. Their peers in North America, too, cite leadership
transitions and domestic political conflicts most often as domestic risks, as
they’ve done throughout 2016. What’s more, respondents in Latin America are
more than twice as likely as others to identify political transitions and
conflicts as top risks to company-level growth.
Political transitions rank among the top
five risks to global growth, too. Furthermore, the share citing this risk has
grown steadily over time: from 10 percent a year ago to 27 percent now.
Executives in every region but China cite geopolitical instability most often
as a threat to global economic growth, while those in China (53 percent) are
most likely to cite slowing growth in their home country.
Three months after the United Kingdom
voted to leave the European Union, only 17 percent of respondents identify the
exit of one or more countries from the eurozone as a potential threat to global
growth. Respondents in the eurozone are as likely as everyone else to identify
eurozone exits as a concern. And globally, the share citing this concern nearly
equals the 19 percent of executives who cited it in June.
Global
views hold steady
Three months after the Brexit referendum,
a decision that took much of the world by surprise, the latest results indicate
that respondents’ views on the global economy have changed little. As in our
previous survey, conducted a few weeks before the vote, executives are most
likely to say that global conditions have stayed the same in the past six
months and that conditions will remain steady in the months ahead.
In their views on the world economy,
executives in emerging markets are again more optimistic than their
developed-market peers. Thirty-five percent of emerging-market respondents
expect global conditions will improve in the next six months, compared with
one-quarter of those in developed markets—and those in Latin America are the
most optimistic. At the other end of the spectrum is North America, where only
17 percent expect improvements in the world economy, though twice as many
expect improvements in their home economies.
With respect to certain
geographies—specifically, the eurozone and China—few executives expect dramatic
changes in the near future. Executives tend to expect that over the next six
months, the eurozone’s economy is likely to see either minimal growth (32
percent) or minimal contraction (31 percent). But those in the eurozone are
likelier than others to expect growth. On China’s prospects in the next year,
respondents overall are, as they were in June, more positive than not.
Forty-six percent of all respondents (and 53 percent in China) say it is very
or somewhat likely that the country will hit the 2016 targets of its current
five-year plan.
http://www.mckinsey.com/business-functions/strategy-and-corporate-finance/our-insights/economic-conditions-snapshot-september-2016-mckinsey-global-survey-results?cid=other-eml-alt-mip-mck-oth-1609
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