Developing economies will shake off U.S.
slowdown.
Affluent investors will suffer from a slowing U.S. economy in
2007, one that will continue to be outpaced by emerging markets such as China,
according a new study by UBS Wealth Management. The report predicts U.S. growth
will drop from 3.4 percent this year to 2 percent next year, while China’s will
slip from 10.2 percent to 9.1 percent.
In its latest UBS Global Outlook, the multinational bank’s
wealth advisory group forecasts that several countries will buck the trend of a
worldwide slowdown in real GDP growth. While global growth will slip from 5.1
percent to 4.5 percent in 2007, nations such as Brazil (3.2 percent to 4.0
percent) and Russia (6.7 percent to 7.4 percent) will thrive.
The study attributes the U.S. slowdown to the continued correction
in the real estate market; this depressed growth will affect other regions such
as Europe, where the growth rate is estimated to slip from 2.7 to 1.7 percent. A
decline in European government spending and higher interest rates will also
shackle that area.
Many emerging markets will be hampered by tepid economic
conditions in the U.S. and around the world, along with slowing commodity price
increases and rising global interest rates. But the UBS study remains optimistic
about the ability for some developing nations to weather these difficulties,
based on improved economic fundamentals. Brazil, for example, now boasts an
account surplus for one of the few times in the past 30 years.
The study forecasts some slowdown in China due to a tightened
money supply. With interest rate hikes only now beginning to show real effects,
however, UBS also foresees a soft landing that will permit China to retain the
highest growth rates of any of the 16 countries measured in the study.
—Andrew Farrell
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