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INTRODUCTION
January / February 2003

WORLD

Global economy under threat

World economic recovery faces imminent risk and policy makers have limited room for manoeuvre, UN analysts warned.

Despite the 2001-02 shakeout in equities and tech investment, impediments to a decisive return to strong world economic growth in 2003 and beyond remain, in the form of overcapacity, overvalued asset prices, shaky investor confidence and macroeconomic imbalances, reports United Nations.

According to information supplied by United Nations Information Centre (UNIC), following a slow start, the world economy is expected to pick up steam in the second half of 2003. After an expansion of only 1.7 percent in 2002, the world economy is projected to grow by 2.75 percent this year.

But in developed countries falling equity values and weak business spending are constraining economic recovery, with weak and volatile equity prices contributing to the erosion of consumer and business confidence, said UNIC based in Kathmandu.

Job ads in Australia fall by 13.7%

The number of employment advertisements in major Australian newspapers fell by 13.7 percent from November to December, signalling a likely slowing of job growth for the first months of 2003, analysts said on recently.

The seasonally adjusted figures compiled by the ANZ bank showed a weekly average of 19,032 job ads in December, down by 2.4 percent from a year earlier.

In November job advertisements were down by 2.6 percent from October but up by 14.7 percent year-on-year. Four non newspaper Internet sites carried a seasonally adjusted average of 66,883 job advertisements per week in December, down by 2.8 percent from November but up by 14.4 percent year-on-year, ANZ said.

The total number of job advertisements in newspapers and on the Internet in December was down a seasonally adjusted by 5.4 percent from November to 85,915 but rose by 10.2 percent year-on-year.

ANZ chief economist Saul Eslake said that taken at face value, the fall in December job advertisements pointed to a significant slowing in employment growth during the first few months of 2003.

US economy grew by 4%

The US economy grew at a healthy 4 percent rate from July through September, the government has said, but analysts remained concerned that rising unemployment and weak consumer spending will trim growth to just half that amount in the current quarter.

The Commerce Department's final estimate of activity in the July-September showed no change in the overall figure from the figure released although individual components of growth shifted slightly.

Consumer spending rose at an even faster 4.2 percent rate with purchases of big-ticket items stich as cars surging ahead at a 22.8 percent, reflecting cut rate financing offers. But economists are worried that sales during the all important Christmas season have dropped off considerably, in part because of consumer anxiety about rising unemployment, which returned to an eight-year high of 6 percent in November, and worries about the economic impact of a possible war with Iraq. Many economists believe growth in the current October-December will slip to around 2 percent with the most pessimistic saying it could come in under 1 percent. The concern is that with growth slowing so much, any type of jolt could push the country back into a full-blown recession. "If we asume a pretty quick and decisive war, then the economy should do well," said Sung Won Sohn, chief economist at Wells Fargo in Minneapolis. "But if we have a messy and costly war with a big rise in oil prices, then we could have another recession."

US companies ready to boost investment in Russia

US energy companies are ready to pour billions of dollars into developing the vast untapped oil and gas fields in northern Russia, but the country's shady investment climate continues to scare off many potential investors, the US ambassador to Moscow said recently.

"American business are afraid to do business on the Russian market because of the weak legal protection offered to foreign investors," Alexander Vershbow was quoted by ITAR TASS in Russian as saying.

Vershbow told the news agency US companies were "ready to invest billions of dollars in projects" on Russia's Sakhalin island and in the far north.

"The energy sector is the most promising area for the development of Russian-American economic relations," Vershbow said. He also said economic reforms carried out in the past two years had improved Russia's investment climate, and reiterated US support for Russia's membership in the World Trade Organization.

British trade deficit hits new record high

The British trade deficit was driven up to a new record high in November by dwindling exports, particularly crude oil shipments to the United official figures showed recently.

The global trade in goods deficit widened to 3.98 billion pounds (6.1 billion euros, 6.4 billion dollars) in November from a revised shortfall of 3.63 billion the previous month, the National Statistics office said.

The deficit, the highest since records began in 1697, was fueled by a 6.5 percent fall in exports to non-European Union countries, notably crude shipments to the United States, the office said. The size of the shortfall surprised economists. Consensus forecasts had been looking for a figure of 3.1 billion pounds.

The trade deficit with non EU countries increased to 3.07 billion pounds in November from a revised shortfall of 2.38 billion in October.

With its economy motoring along at a brisker pace than many of its trading partners, the value of Britain's imports of goods have overshot that of its exports, which have been crimped by a strong pound and weak global economy.

Manufacturing activity index falls in France

French manufacturing activity declined in France last in December in the face of weakening demand a purchasing managers index revealed recently.

The index, compiled by CDAF group of purchasing and supply managers, fell to 48.7 in December from 49.6 in November and 49 in October.

The new decline reflects lower readings in sub-indices covering production, new orders, employment, supplier deliveries and inventories.

The CDAF said that demand and overall manufacturing output fell back in December "after both had shown signs of a potential recovery."

It added that many companies had reduced output in order to cut costs.

"These costs cuts, which are necessary in an unfavorable economic climate, were implemented by drawing on existing stocks in order to meet sales requirements," the CADF said.

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