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OECD latest economy growth and inflation projection 2022/2023

India Manufacturing has already been in negative YoY since previous quarter, despite their PMI number is in high expansion every months in 2022. PMI is calculated by IHS Markit and they survey Indian industries.

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India Manufacturing has already been in negative YoY since previous quarter, despite their PMI number is in high expansion every months in 2022. PMI is calculated by IHS Markit and they survey Indian industries.

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Growth in this quarter was bit lower than expected due to higher revised base in previous year quarter. Now revised growth in last yr is 9.1 instead of 8.7 and this quarter is lower than the estimate of 4.7 to 4.4. Basically neither too bad nor good news. Overall the estimates are still that we would achieve 7% growth this year 🤞
 
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Growth in this quarter was bit lower than expected due to higher revised base in previous year quarter. Now revised growth in last yr is 9.1 instead of 8.7 and this quarter is lower than the estimate of 4.7 to 4.4. Basically neither too bad nor good news. Overall the estimates are still that we would achieve 7% growth this year 🤞
Look like you buy the argument from your Government economic advisor. He is just making excuse. Data is data. It is your own government fault to previously making inacurate calculation on previous quarter growth. GDP growth should be calculated using the right data, by revising previous calculation mistake then your current growth is the one that is close to the reality.

Indonesian statistic ( BPS ) always release data much sooner than Indian. I never see they make any revision on their quarter GDP growth calculation.

This is why your Central Bank still estimate your Q4 at around 4.5 %.

What is important is the current trend where you have normal base from previous year. Indian Q1 and Q2 are high due to the effect of lock down in the previous year. The total growth can still be at 6.8 or 7 percent is due to Indian Q1 and Q2 growth are very high due to lower base in previous years caused by Covid economic effect
 
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India’s Economy Looks Shaky Under the Hood​

The key driver of India’s economy—domestic demand—stumbled last quarter​

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Private consumer spending comprises about 60% of India’s gross domestic product.PHOTO: IDREES MOHAMMED/SHUTTERSTOCK


By Megha Mandavia
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March 2, 2023 7:38 am ET


India’s economy is losing steam in the one place that has been the South Asian nation’s strongest bulwark against a possible global recession: robust domestic demand.

India’s economy slowed further in the December quarter, figures released this week showed, as postpandemic pent up demand ebbed and the country’s manufacturing sector continued to weaken. Asia’s third largest economy recorded year-over-year growth of 4.4% last quarter, down from 6.3% in the September quarter.

Weakness in private consumption stood out the most. India’s private consumer spending, which comprises about 60% of India’s gross domestic product, rose just 2.1% year over year, compared with an 8.8% increase in the September quarter. It was mainly hurt by higher interest rates and elevated inflation. Slower growth in rural spending after some pandemic-era subsidies were cut could have also played a role.


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Higher borrowing costs will probably continue to pinch pocketbooks, especially in urban areas, as the Reserve Bank of India remains laser-focused on reining in stubborn inflation. It has raised benchmark interest rates by 2.5 percentage points since May last year and will probably hike by another 0.25 point to 6.75% in April, squeezing household budgets further. Despite an aggressive rate-raising cycle, retail inflation jumped to a three-month high of 6.52% in January.

A closer look at other numbers in the GDP data also paints a worrisome picture. Import growth fell more sharply than export growth, again signaling weak domestic demand. And while fixed investment growth was a relative bright spot, it still slowed for the second quarter in a row.

Fizzling momentum at a time of high global economic uncertainty and tightening global financial conditions also spells trouble for the country’s monetary policy stance. A weak external environment wasn’t entirely unexpected, but the emerging evidence of rapidly slowing domestic demand makes the central bank’s job much harder. A heat wave or subpar monsoon could make things even more difficult by hitting agricultural output, and boosting food price inflation.

Nomura economists Sonal Varma and Aurodeep Nandi think markets are still significantly underappreciating the risks to India’s growth. They say the country’s growth cycle has peaked, and a combination of weaker global growth and tight domestic and global financial conditions could spell further trouble for exports, investment and discretionary consumption.

The International Monetary Fund still projects India will be the fastest-growing major economy in 2023—largely on the back of resilient domestic demand. The Indian government forecasts that India will grow 7% in the year ending in March 2023, and another 6.5% the following year.

Those numbers may turn out to be optimistic if private consumption doesn’t pick up the pace again soon.

 
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Asia's central banks don't have a lot more interest rate hikes to implement, economist says​

 
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I dont think Indonesia Central Bank is going to hike interest rate anymore. Current pressure in Rupiah I believe can be lifted if the law regarding exporters to put they USD in the country is announced and implemented.

I also predict Indonesia can still have good trade surplus for this year around 45 billion USD which is good enough to strenghten Rupiah in my opinion and FDI is likely growing which is another source to support Rupiah. Indonesia economy is alhamduliLLAH good with company profitability is also showing it through large increase of their tax figure in January where I think the tax revenue growth will likely continue, inshaAllah. These companies profitability then will likely affect the stock and bond market positively and possibly lure more USD from foreign investors which is in the end will help Rupiah as well.
 
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In SVB collapse, Asia sees 1997 all over again​


Silicon Valley Bank panic now sweeping global markets suggests more destabilizing financial events are likely around the corner.


By WILLIAM PESEK
MARCH 13, 2023

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A mournful Thai holds a Thai baht note. Photo: NurPhoto via AFP Forum / Anusak Laowilas



To understand the Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) collapse spooking markets, look no further than events in Jakarta.

The Indonesian rupiah’s 3.2% drop since February 1 demonstrates how quickly Asia has resigned itself to the fact that the US Federal Reserve isn’t done tightening. Another batch of too-strong-for-Fed-comfort US employment figures in February only increased the risk.

Episodes of extreme dollar strength tend to hit Southeast Asia particularly hard. And while Indonesia’s financial system is far healthier than it was amid the Asian financial crisis 25 years ago, vulnerabilities abound. Not surprisingly, the region’s dollar-centric economies tend to see another potential 1997-like crisis around every corner.

Case in point: the Fed’s most aggressive tightening cycle since the mid-1990s, an episode that still haunts leaders from Jakarta to Tokyo. As the Fed doubled short-term rates in just 12 months between 1994 and 1995, the collateral damage really started to rack up.

Victims included Mexico, which plunged into the peso’s “tequila crisis.” Orange County, California veered into bankruptcy. Wall Street securities giant Kidder, Peabody & Co went extinct. Then the most spectacular pileup of all: Asia.

As the dollar skyrocketed, currency pegs became impossible to defend in Bangkok, Jakarta and Seoul. Fallout from the barrage of devaluations paved the way for the late 1997 collapse of the 100-year-old Yamaichi Securities, one of Japan’s fabled big-four brokerages.

Yamaichi’s demise panicked officials in Washington. Both the US Treasury Department and the International Monetary Fund worried not that Japan was too big to fail. They worried it was too big to save.

China, too. In 1997 and 1998, US officials all but begged Beijing not to devalue the yuan. That, they feared, would spark a new wave of competitive currency devaluations and drag Malaysia and the Philippines, two nations that hadn’t devalued, into the fray.

All this explains why the SVB collapse is triggering Asia’s post-traumatic stress disorder over Fed austerity from the late 1990s. That PTSD was on display back in 2013 amid the Fed “taper tantrum.” Back then, Morgan Stanley included India and Indonesia in its “Fragile Five” list of economies on the brink along with Brazil, South Africa and Turkey.

At the time, Bank of America strategist Michael Hartnett warned of a “repeat of the 1994 moment.” Then-Goldman Sachs CEO Lloyd Blankfein admitted that “I worry now as I look out of the corner of my eye to the 1994 period.”

This is the minefield that Fed Chairman Jerome Powell is struggling to navigate. Silicon Valley Bank’s troubles could be the tip of the iceberg for US banks.

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Silicon Valley Bank’s troubles could be the tip of the iceberg for US banks. Image: Screengrab / Twitter / TechCrunch


“Hence the canary-in-the-coal-mine fear, which has caused US bank stocks to plunge more than 15% in a week and market volatility to surge,” says analyst Tan Kai Xian at Gavekal Research.

“These travails were only reinforced by Powell’s Congressional testimony last week, amounting to a ‘whatever it takes’ declaration to crush inflation, even if that means upping the pace of rate hikes and putting people out of work.”

Over the weekend, US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, the Powell-led Fed and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation unveiled steps to contain the fallout from Silicon Valley Bank’s collapse.

With all SVB depositors being paid back in full, averting a potential collapse of the US financial system, it now falls to Powell’s team to devise a way forward. And preferably one that won’t send markets from Indonesia to Japan reeling.

The “action dramatically reduces the risk of further contagion,” says analyst Thomas Simons at Jefferies. It’s heartening, too, that SVB’s mistakes in managing its balance sheet are seen as “highly idiosyncratic” to analysts at Morgan Stanley, reducing risks of broader US financial contagion.

Erik Nielsen, economic adviser at UniCredit Bank, calls SVB “a rather special case of poor balance-sheet management, holding massive amounts of long-duration bonds funded by short-term liabilities.”

Economist Paul Ashworth at Capital Economics notes that “rationally, this should be enough to stop any contagion from spreading and taking down more banks, which can happen in the blink of an eye in the digital age. But contagion has always been more about irrational fear, so we would stress that there is no guarantee this will work.”

Indeed, the underlying problem is that the Fed is trying to tame inflation with tools that won’t get the job done. Much of this inflation is better addressed with supply-side reforms that President Joe Biden and Congress have been slow to implement. Anyone who thought driving the US into a controlled recession might work just had a brutal wake-up call from California.

“While the Fed wants tighter financial conditions to restrain aggregate demand, they don’t want that to occur in a non-linear fashion that can quickly spiral out of control,” says economist Michael Feroli at JPMorgan Chase & Co. “If they indeed have used the right tool to address financial contagion risks – time will tell – then they can also use the right tool to continue to address inflation risks: higher interest rates.”

The mini-panic on global markets suggests many aren’t buying the SVB-is-an-isolated-case argument. That has economists at Barclays Plc thinking the Fed rate that had been widely expected later this month is now on hold.

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US Fed Chairman Jerome Powell has a potential bank crisis on his hands. Photo: AFP / Bill O’Leary

“It raises risks of broader distress within the banking system that could make the FOMC (Federal Open Market Committee) reluctant to return to 50bp hikes in March,” they wrote. “Indeed, the possibility of capital losses at other institutions cannot be completely dismissed, with rising policy rates raising banks’ funding costs.”

Goldman Sachs economist Jan Hatzius agrees. “In light of the stress in the banking system, we no longer expect the FOMC to deliver a rate hike at its next meeting on March 22,” he says. More likely, the Fed will do smaller 25 basis point hikes in May, June and July, boosting rates as high as 5.5%.

Yet the fallout from SVB could further stymie America’s innovative animal spirits in ways that leave the world’s biggest economy even less productive and nimble.

“It certainly is going to have very substantial consequences for Silicon Valley — and for the economy of the whole venture sector, which has been dynamic — unless the government is able to assure that this situation is worked through,” former Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers told Bloomberg.

It’s already having substantial consequences for Asian markets trying to read the Washington policy tea leaves. The 1990s vibe emanating from Fed headquarters in Washington is becoming harder and harder for dollar bulls to dismiss.

The more upward pressure there is on the US currency, the less capital that flows to Indonesia and other Southeast Asian economies that need investment to finance giant infrastructure projects.

Continued tight Fed policies pose their own risks to Xi Jinping’s China, just as the Communist Party leader is beginning his third term. Rising US rates put China’s vital export engine at risk and add to the strains facing highly indebted mainland property developers struggling to avoid default.

Fed overtightening is also a direct threat to the roughly $1 trillion of Chinese state wealth parked in US government debt.

The yen’s dwindling value, thanks to a strong dollar, is a crisis in slow motion for Prime Minister Fumio Kishida and outgoing Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda. Asia’s No 2 economy is importing increasing waves of inflation via food and energy markets.

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A customer holds Philippine peso notes during a bank transaction in Manila. Photo: AFP / Romeo Gacad


For governments in Bangkok, Jakarta, Manila and Putrajaya, currencies under downward pressure make US debt harder to service. That also raises the costs of food and other vital items.

Recently, says economist Jonathan Fortun at the Institute of International Finance, “we see clouds forming on the horizon. A renewed hawkish Federal Reserve sentiment is spilling over into some emerging markets, causing short-dated receivers to struggle as interest-rate expectations are pushed further back in time. Monetary policy uncertainty may boost demand for dollar protection, as the relationship between EM currency and US interest-rate volatility continues to strengthen.”

For now, few think the SVB debacle will trigger a 2008-like global financial meltdown. But the speed with which Asian officials have swung from guarded optimism over the US financial system to worrying about another 1997 is its own economic indicator for the year ahead. And not a good one.

Follow William Pesek on Twitter at @WilliamPesek
 
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Asia's central banks don't have a lot more interest rate hikes to implement, economist says​

I dont think Indonesia Central Bank is going to hike interest rate anymore. Current pressure in Rupiah I believe can be lifted if the law regarding exporters to put they USD in the country is announced and implemented.

I also predict Indonesia can still have good trade surplus for this year around 45 billion USD which is good enough to strenghten Rupiah in my opinion and FDI is likely growing which is another source to support Rupiah. Indonesia economy is alhamduliLLAH good with company profitability is also showing it through large increase of their tax figure in January where I think the tax revenue growth will likely continue, inshaAllah. These companies profitability then will likely affect the stock and bond market positively and possibly lure more USD from foreign investors which is in the end will help Rupiah as well.

Good decision by Indonesian Central Bank

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EMERGING MARKETS-Asia FX mixed as global bank fears mount; Indonesia c.bank holds rates​

Credit: REUTERS/THOMAS WHITE
By Navya Mittal


March 16 (Reuters) - Asian currencies were mixed on Thursday after problems at Credit Suisse renewed fears of a full-blown global banking crisis, with the Indonesian rupiah holding steady after the country's central bank left rates unchanged in line with market expectation.

The rupiah IDR= eased 0.1%, while the country's benchmark stock index .JKSE fell 1.1%, after Bank Indonesia stuck by its message that previous hikes were sufficient to steer inflation back to within target later this year.

The central bank held rates at 5.75% and said inflation was seen returning within its target range of 2%-4% from September.

Bank Indonesia is second in the region to pause rate hikes after the Malaysian central bank earlier this month kept its benchmark interest rate unchanged for the second consecutive time.

Elsewhere in the region, the Malaysian ringgit MYR= snapped a five-day winning streak by shedding 0.5%, while Thailand's baht THB=TH appreciated 0.3%.

"The key factor now is moving towards risk aversion. So, I think that may figure some dollar strength and flight towards other safe-haven currencies like the yen," said Jeff Ng, a senior currency analyst at MUFG Bank.

Credit Suisse's largest investor, Saudi National Bank, said it could not raise its stake in the Swiss bank any further on regulatory grounds, re-igniting jitters among investors about the resilience of the global banking system just days after the collapse of U.S. lender Silicon Valley Bank (SVB).

Investors rushed to safe-haven currencies such as the U.S. dollar =USD and the Japanese yen JPY=. The yen appreciated 0.4% against the dollar, while the greenback fell after jumping nearly 1% in the previous session. USD/

Some Southeast Asian countries so far have flagged or limited impact from the problems facing some banks in the United States as well as Credit Suisse. Malaysia said on Wednesday its banks had limited exposure to SVB.

Stocks across the region, notably financials, continued to lose ground. Equities in Manila .PSI fell as much as 2.1% to their lowest in four months, while shares in Thailand .SETI lost more than 1%.

Highlights
** Asian crops face El Nino threat, deepens food inflation worries
** Singapore, Indonesia to cooperate on renewables, new Indonesia capital
** Benchmark Indonesia bond yields ID10YT=RR slipped 2.9 basis points to 6.728%, lowest since Feb. 21
Asia stock indexes and currencies at 0732 GMT

 
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Good decision by Indonesian Central Bank

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EMERGING MARKETS-Asia FX mixed as global bank fears mount; Indonesia c.bank holds rates​


AlhamduliLLAH

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Following Jakarta Composite Index, Rupiah Today Becomes 'Muscular'​

Illustration of rupiah currency
Illustration/Photo: Getty Images/iStockphoto/Squirescape


Eduardo Simorangkir - detikFinance
Jumat, 17 Mar 2023 11:47 WIB



Jakarta-
The United States (US) dollar exchange rate against the rupiah this afternoon was observed to weaken. Quoting RTI data this afternoon, Friday (17/3/2023), the US dollar rate is perched at the level of IDR 15,355, or down 64 points (0.4%) compared to yesterday.

The strengthening of the rupiah exchange rate this afternoon corroborated the success of the JCI which also strengthened until this afternoon. JCI this afternoon was observed to rise 89 points (1.37%) to a level of 6,655. The rupiah moved at the level of 15,344-15,419 until this afternoon.

When compared to the last week, the US dollar depreciated 0.8% against the rupiah. Its movement was observed at the level of 15,325-15,485.

Meanwhile, when compared to the beginning of the year, the rupiah was observed to strengthen by 1.43% against the US dollar. The movement is at the level of 14,835-15,747.

The strengthening of the rupiah coincided with the decision of Bank Indonesia (BI) which at the Board of Governors' Meeting (RDG) yesterday decided to hold the BI 7 days repo rate at the level of 5.75%. The central bank believes that the BI7DRR of 5.75% is adequate to direct core inflation to remain within the 3±1% range in the first half of 2023 and consumer price index (CPI) inflation to return to the target corridor of 3±1% in the second half of 2023.

(eds/eds)

 
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Economic outlook: slightly more optimistic but fragile, says OECD​

17/03/2023 -

Watch the live webcast of the press conference

On the back of improved business and consumer confidence, declining food and energy prices and the re-opening of the Chinese economy, the OECD’s latest Interim Economic Outlook projects global growth to reach 2.6% in 2023 and 2.9% in 2024.

Headline inflation is projected to recede gradually through 2023 in most G20 countries, from 8.1% in 2022 to 5.9% in 2023 and 4.5% in 2024. This is due to tighter monetary policy taking effect, energy prices easing after a mild winter in Europe, and global food prices declining. However, core inflation remains persistent, held up by strong service price increases and cost pressures from tight labour markets. Inflationary pressures will require many central banks to maintain high policy rates well into 2024.

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Annual GDP growth in the United States is projected at 1.5% in 2023 and 0.9% in 2024 as monetary policy moderates demand pressures. In the euro area, growth is projected to be 0.8% in 2023, but pick up to 1.5% in 2024 as the drag on incomes from high energy prices recedes. Growth in China is expected to rebound to 5.3% this year and 4.9% in 2024.

“The outlook today is slightly more optimistic than our previous forecasts, though the global economy remains fragile,” OECD Secretary-General Mathias Cormann said. “Some key risks, such as persistent large-scale energy and food market disruptions have been mitigated for now, however Russia’s war of aggression against Ukraine, persistence in services inflation, financial market turbulence, and the steady decline in underlying growth prospects, could be sources of further disruption. More targeted fiscal support and structural reforms to revive productivity growth will be key to optimising the recovery and long-term growth prospects.”

The OECD notes that the improvement in the outlook is at an early stage, and risks remain tilted to the downside. Uncertainty about the course of the war in Ukraine and its broader consequences is a key concern. The overall impact from monetary policy changes is difficult to gauge and could continue to expose financial and banking sector vulnerabilities and make it more difficult for some emerging market economies to service their debts. Pressures in global energy markets could also reappear, leading to renewed price spikes, and higher inflationary pressures.

Monetary policy needs to stay the course until there are clear signs that underlying inflationary pressures are lowered durably.

Fiscal support should be prudent and needs to become more focused on those most in need to mitigate the impact of high food and energy prices. Better targeting and a timely reduction in overall support would help to ensure fiscal sustainability, preserve incentives to lower energy use, and limit additional demand stimulus at a time of high inflation.

Rekindling structural reform efforts is needed to revive productivity growth and alleviate supply constraints. Enhancing business dynamism, lowering barriers to cross-border trade and economic migration and fostering flexible and inclusive labour markets would boost competition, mitigate supply shortages and strengthen gains from digitalisation.


For the full report and more information, visit the Economic Outlook online. Media queries should be directed to the OECD Media Office (+33 1 4524 9700)

Working with over 100 countries, the OECD is a global policy forum that promotes policies to preserve individual liberty and improve the economic and social well-being of people around the world.

 
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IMF seems reluctant to explain their forecast in ASEAN which shows downgrade growth despite they project China GDP growth is better than their October projection. Fishy analyst I would say.....Better we see what happen in the next few days as ASEAN countries will shows their real GDP growth for Q4 2022.

The projection should wait Q4 2022 data rather than rushing showing the projection in the end of January.


Indonesia is downgraded into 4.8 % from 5 % projection in October 2022

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IMF team has made new assessment on Indonesian economy and revise up their previous prediction on Indonesian economy

Today released

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Argentina faces economic crisis as annual inflation reaches 104%​

 
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Asia Poised to Drive Global Economic Growth, Boosted by China’s Reopening

China and India together are forecast to generate about half of global growth this year
Thomas Helbling, Shanaka J. Peiris, Krishna Srinivasan

May 1, 2023

Asia and the Pacific is a relative bright spot amid the more somber context of the global economy's rocky recovery.

As the Chart of the Week shows, the region will contribute about 70 percent of global growth this year—a much greater share than in recent years.

COTW-Final-Growth-contributions-chart.ashx


Our latest Regional Economic Outlook describes the resilience of the world’s most dynamic region and important challenges facing its policymakers. Growth in Asia and the Pacific is forecast to accelerate to 4.6 percent this year from 3.8 percent last year.

The main development has been the reopening of China, where surging consumption is boosting growth across the region despite weaker demand from the rest of the world. Risks to the outlook include spillovers from greater-than-expected US monetary policy tightening and supply chain disruptions associated with geoeconomic fragmentation.

But the region also faces important challenges. In the short term, monetary and fiscal policies will need to remain tight to bring inflation durably back to central bank targets and stabilize public debt. An integrated policy response using all available tools will be needed to manage global shocks. While Asia’s financial systems haven’t seen major impacts following recent banking turmoil in the United States and Europe, they need to be carefully monitored given high leverage among households and corporates.

In the longer term, the Chinese economy that has been the primary engine of regional and global growth for decades is expected to slow considerably in the face of unfavorable demographics and a productivity slowdown. The region should prioritize structural reforms to boost long-term growth, including through innovation and digitalization, while accelerating the green energy transition.

 
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