Goldman no longer sees eurozone recession as it lifts outlook
ECONOMISTS at Goldman Sachs no longer predict a eurozone recession after the economy proved more resilient at the end of 2022, natural gas prices fell sharply and China abandoned Covid-19 restrictions earlier than anticipated.
Gross domestic product is now expected to increase 0.6 per cent this year, compared with an earlier forecast for a contraction of 0.1 per cent. Economists led by Jari Stehn warn in a report to clients of weak growth during the winter given the energy crisis, and say headline inflation will ease faster than thought, to about 3.25 per cent by end-2023.
“We also look for core inflation to slow due to cooling goods prices but see continued upward pressure on services inflation due to rising labour costs,” they said. “Given more resilient activity, sticky core inflation and hawkish commentary, we expect the European Central Bank (ECB) to tighten significantly more in coming months.”
Goldman reiterated its call for half-point increases in interest rates at the ECB’s February and March meetings, followed by a final quarter-point step in May to take the deposit rate to 3.25 per cent. BLOOMBERG
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