Last year saw a particularly hopeless set of forecasts, with the official forecasts of inflation far too optimistic, and hardly anyone predicting the collapse of the prices of US high-tech shares. Even the better forecasts have not been much help to investors. Take the one from Morgan Stanley, which did predict a surge in inflation and interest rates, thought that the benchmark S&P500 index would be rangebound and volatile. Well, it has been volatile, but not rangebound, for it is currently down nearly 20 per cent on the year.
So rather than trying to predict what might happen in the coming year, let's step back and think of the wider features of the world economy right now. Here are five propositions.
First, there is a global economic cycle and this year sees the downswing of that cycle. We all know this, and while there is a debate as to which countries will come through it in better shape than the others, the big picture is one of recession. Current conventional predictions are that the US will pull out all right, the UK will have a long and difficult recession, and that continental Europe will be somewhere in between.
This story is from the December 28, 2022 edition of The Independent.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the December 28, 2022 edition of The Independent.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
Let e-scooters on our roads? As a cyclist, I'm all for it...
Transport secretary Louise Haigh is preparing to announce a plan to legalise electric scooters on Britain’s roads, as part of her wider integrated transport strategy.
Grandad vs YouTuber: is the Tyson-Paul fight for real?
Critics scream 'fix' ahead of tonight's big bout in Dallas
'Des was the gold standard'
A contender for the 'Match of the Day' job, Kelly Cates of Sky Sports tells Ross Heppenstall she's not looking to move but if the BBC calls there's one ex-host she'd love to emulate
Watkins gamble pays off to leave tricky Kane question
In the tale of the captain and the caretaker, Lee Carsley’s great gamble paid off.
Why I'm not mega excited about Reeves's pension play
The chancellor aims to free £80bn of investment by pooling funds. But are savers being overlooked in pursuit of growth?
Could Zelensky go nuclear if Trump cuts US support?
Two years ago, as the Russian army was retreating back from northeast Ukraine, there were serious worries that Vladimir Putin would use tactical nuclear weapons to block the Ukrainian advance.
Israel's forced displacement of Palestinians a 'war crime'
Israeli forces have committed war crimes and crimes against humanity in Gaza through a \"systematic\" campaign of \"massive deliberate forced displacement\" of Palestinians, Human Rights Watch (HRW) has said.
Fears for climate pledges as Argentina leaves Cop29
Right-wing leader orders delegation to quit Baku summit
Thousands in Spain unable to return home as deluge brings fresh risk of floods
Thousands of Spaniards evacuated ahead of a fresh deluge of rain have been told not to return home as swollen riverbanks threaten to overflow.
House pariah status landed.Gaetz attorney general nod
President-elect Donald Trump has lined up former Florida congressman Matt Gaetz to be his next attorney general.