OECD: Outlook for Global Economy Improves

The following is from the 14 January 2013 edition of Industry Week.

PARIS -- Economic activity is picking up or steadying in the United States, the eurozone and in China, the OECD said on Monday, based on leading indicators of activity in the main industrialized economies.

"Composite leading indicators point to stabilizing economic growth in most major economies," the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development said.

The OECD's monthly indicator summarizing signals from economies showed that growth is "firming" in the United States, that a downturn in the eurozone is "stabilizing" and that there are "tentative signs of a turning point [upwards] in China."

In the OECD area, which comprises 34 countries, growth is "firming," the OECD concluded.

For several months, international economic forecasting organizations have warned that the eurozone debt crisis was one of the main threats to the outlook for the global economy, which struggled towards the end of last year.

But in recent weeks, sentiment on financial markets has edged toward the view that the eurozone is getting on top of its crisis.

In the United States and the United Kingdom, which is not a member of the eurozone, the overall indicator "continues to point to economic growth firming," the OECD said. "In China and India, signs of a turning point are more marked than in last month's assessment."

The indicators for Italy, Germany, France and the eurozone as a whole "point to a stabilization in growth prospects," it said. "Likewise, in Brazil and Japan, tentative signs of stabilizing growth are emerging."

But the figures for Canada and Russia "continue to signal weak growth prospects," the OECD said.

Copyright Agence France-Presse, 2013