Economic Conditions Snapshot,
December 2017: McKinsey Global Survey results
Respondents’ economic
optimism and confidence in their companies’ prospects reach a year-long high,
though overinflated asset prices are a growing concern.
After reporting
increasingly positive views on
the economy throughout 2017, respondents to McKinsey’s newest survey on
economic conditions are ending the year on an exceptionally cheerful note. Most
respondents say that both global and domestic conditions have improved in
recent months, and for the months ahead, they are two to three times more
likely to believe that conditions will improve than they are to expect
declines. Majorities of respondents predict economic growth—worldwide and at
home—in the coming months, and that trade will rise between their own countries
and the rest of the world. Expectations for companies’ growth and demand also
have reached new heights. Among possible risks,
overinflated asset prices are an increasingly worrisome threat to global
growth, while in respondents’ home economies, concern about heightened equity
prices is on the rise.
A buoyant global outlook, amid growing concern over asset
bubbles
Respondents’ views on the global
economy are the most enthusiastic they have been in 2017—and have far exceeded
earlier expectations. Six in ten respondents say global economic conditions are
better now than they were six months ago; in the June survey, only four in ten
predicted economic conditions would be better by now. Across regions,
respondents in developed Asia are the cheeriest about the state of the global
economy—and much more so than they were in the previous survey .Compared
with three months ago, they are also much cheerier about current conditions in
their home economies.
What’s more, the outlook on the
world economy’s prospects is ever more optimistic. Fifty-one percent of
respondents expect global conditions will improve in the next six months,
compared with 42 percent in the previous survey and 28 percent who said so one
year ago. When asked for the first time about the global economy’s growth rate,
an even larger share—72 percent—expect it will increase over the next six
months. By contrast, only 14 percent predict the global growth rate will
contract.
Even over the long term,
respondents are more confident than not in the global economy’s momentum. When
asked to assess the likelihood of four global scenarios in
the next decade, 51 percent cite the two scenarios involving higher growth as
most likely, while only 18 percent cite “rolling regional crises,” the scenario
characterized by the lowest levels of growth. Back in March, the lowest-growth
scenario was ranked most likely by one-quarter of respondents.
At the same time, opinions on trade
also have grown rosier. Nearly half of respondents now say the level of trade between their
home countries and the rest of the world has increased in the past year.
Looking ahead, 51 percent expect trade levels will increase in 2018—up from 32
percent one year ago, when we first asked the question.
Respondents in emerging economies are more optimistic about their countries’
trade prospects than their developed-economy peers, a pattern that has been
true all year.
As for risks, concerns about asset
bubbles have continued their rise. Thirty-one percent of respondents identify
asset bubbles as a risk to global growth in the next year, continuing that
risk’s steady climb up the list since last December, when only 8 percent of
respondents cited it. Asset bubbles are more often
selected in developed economies than in emerging ones, particularly in
developed Asia, where half of respondents cite asset bubbles as a threat to
growth. Other risks have shifted meaningfully since one year ago, though geopolitical instability still tops the list of potential threats to global
growth over the next year—as it has since September 2016.
Domestic conditions continue to improve
With respect to the state of their
home economies, respondents are ever more sanguine. Fifty-seven percent of all
respondents say conditions at home improved in the past six months, and 49
percent predict conditions will improve in the next six months, the largest
shares to say so in 2017. An even higher share, 65 percent, predict that the
growth rates of their home economies will increase in the next six months;
across regions, those in India are the most optimistic. Likewise, and
continuing a pattern we have seen all year long, respondents in India express
the most hope that their economy will improve in the coming months. By
contrast—and as in June and September—those in North America are the most
likely to expect conditions will worsen, though their outlook is more positive
than negative.
Compared with the previous survey,
respondents are focused on the same risks to domestic growth but in a slightly
different order of likelihood. Continuing to top the list of risks to their
countries’ growth are domestic political conflicts. This risk is followed by
transitions of political leadership, up from fifth place in September and cited
most often in Latin America. Asset bubbles remain a top-three risk to overall
growth. But a larger share of respondents than in September say equity bubbles
are likely to develop in the next year. Concern about equity bubbles is most
acute in India and in North America. Fifty-two percent and 48 percent in these
regions, respectively, cite equity bubbles, compared with 27 percent of all
respondents.
Optimism on demand and profits
The results suggest that
respondents are more hopeful about their companies’ prospects in 2018 than they
have been in several years. When asked about potential demand for their
companies’ products and services, 61
percent of private-sector respondents say they expect an increase in the next
six months. It’s the largest share to say so since we began asking in 2009, and
respondents in emerging economies are especially cheery. Sixty-six percent of
them predict demand will increase, compared with 58 percent who say so in
developed economies.
Respondents also report an
exceptionally positive outlook on profits: 67 percent expect
their companies’ profits will increase, which is the largest share to say so
since December 2014. By contrast, respondents are about as likely to predict
that the size of their workforces will remain the same or grow over the next
few months.
https://www.mckinsey.com/business-functions/strategy-and-corporate-finance/our-insights/economic-conditions-snapshot-december-2017-mckinsey-global-survey-results?cid=other-eml-alt-mip-mck-oth-1712
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