Nordic Outlook: Effective crisis responses with long-term risks

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Press release
Stockholm, August 25, 2020

Nordic Outlook: Effective crisis responses with long-term risks

Sweden: Continued rebound after smaller GDP decline than feared

Despite increased COVID-19 spread, the economic recovery in advanced economies has been faster than expected. We are revising our GDP forecast for the 37 mainly affluent OECD countries upward to a decline of 6.6 per cent this year, compared to an expected fall of 7 per cent in our May issue of Nordic Outlook. However, we are downgrading our forecast for the overall global economy because emerging market (EM) countries have suffered unexpectedly extensive economic damage from the pandemic. Labour markets in the advanced economies have performed better than anticipated, limiting the upturn in their public debt burden; meanwhile low pay increases are holding back inflation. A combination of fiscal and monetary policy programmes can thus continue to provide support for the recovery. But despite strong growth in 2021 and 2022, resource utilisation will remain below normal. In the long term, expansionary economic policies create challenges, including increased inequality and reduced pressure for change in the economy.

Like the other Nordic countries and the Baltics, the Swedish economy has coped with the pandemic better than the other parts of Europe. Because of more lenient pandemic-related restrictions, Sweden’s GDP will fall by only 3.8 per cent this year, less than half of the expected decline in the euro area and the United Kingdom; we have revised our Swedish forecast upward from -6.5 per cent in May. GDP will then increase by just above 4 per cent in 2021 and by 3 per cent in 2022. New crisis responses are likely in the autumn budget. We expect it to include SEK 100 billion worth of stimulus measures for 2021. Unemployment will peak at just over 10 per cent, and inflation will remain below the Riksbank’s 2 per cent target. If further monetary stimulus is needed, the Riksbank will mainly expand its asset purchases, while the bar is high for a return to key interest rates below zero. The krona will gradually strengthen to SEK 9.60 per euro and SEK 7.50 per US dollar at the end of 2022, but the Swedish currency will not reach its long-term equilibrium level.

Positive, but mixed, surprises despite COVID-19 setbacks

After a dramatic spring, the economic picture has become a bit clearer and forecasts a bit more certain. The spread of the virus has in fact unfolded in a more negative direction than assumed in our May forecast. In spite of this, the economic recovery has been slightly faster than previously predicted, especially in terms of consumption and manufacturing. Meanwhile the divergences between countries and regions have been unexpectedly wide. The Nordic and Baltic countries in particular surprised analysts on the upside during the second quarter of 2020, but the spread of COVID-19 in many emerging market (EM) countries has caused more economic damage than expected. This mixed picture of the pandemic’s impact is reflected in SEB’s new Nordic Outlook forecast. In the Nordics and Baltics, our upward revisions are dramatic: in the 5-6 percentage point range. Meanwhile we have revised our global GDP forecast a percentage point lower to a decline of 4.3 per cent, due to the EM countries.