Europe’s economy is on track to return to its pre-crisis levels in 2022, the International Monetary Fund said on Wednesday.
Though this projection depends on the region’s Covid-19 vaccination campaign.
Europe’s Pandemic-Stricken Economy
European countries have been forced to introduce new restrictions or toughen previous public health measures in recent weeks as Covid infections have surged.
This led to a 0.2 percentage point drop in the IMF’s growth forecast for this year, which currently stands at 4.5%.
“On the assumption that vaccines become widely available in the summer of 2021 and throughout 2022, GDP growth is projected at 3.9% in 2022.”
” This could bring Europe’s GDP back to the pre-pandemic levels,” the IMF said in its latest regional economic outlook.
However, uncertainty over how the pandemic will evolve continues to cloud the outlook.
Particularly when it comes to potential new variants and the speed of the vaccination rollout.
“There’s an unknown on how quickly the third wave can be defeated that we don’t have in the forecast, and that is certainly a downside risk,”
Alfred Kammer, director of the IMF’s European department, told CNBC’s Joumanna Bercetche Wednesday.
“A downside risk is also if the vaccination would be slower than we all currently expect,”
Kammer said, before adding: “We need to be ready that the virus is going to surprise us again.”
In fact, the 27 members of the European Union received some further bad news this week.
Johnson & Johnson said it would delay the rollout of its vaccine in Europe.
After authorities in the U.S. raised concerns about infrequent blood clot complications.
This vaccine was one of four that the bloc relied upon to speed up its vaccination campaign in the second quarter of 2021.
The J&J shot was particularly sought-after by many governments, given that it only requires one inoculation.
This is not the first delay to vaccine distribution in Europe, and the EU has faced sharp criticism over the pace of its rollout to date.
In addition to issues with the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine.
Europe’s drug regulator has been blamed for taking too long to approve new vaccines, to name one of the recent problems.
Surging Inflation
The IMF said it expected to see high prices in the continent throughout 2021.
“Inflation, currently contained by economic slack, is projected to edge up by 1.1 percentage points to 3.1% in 2021.”
“This is partly due to higher commodity prices,” the Fund said in its report.
Surging inflation could force the ECB to adjust its ultra-loose monetary stance.
In the euro area’s specific case, the European Central Bank has said that inflation could end the last quarter of the year at 2%.
This is important for the central bank, given that its mandate is to ensure that inflation remains “close, but below, 2%.”
“Monetary policy needs to remain accommodative as long as prospects for underlying inflationary pressure stay subdued.
Central banks should credibly communicate their resolve to head off a premature pick-up in real yields.
This is while allowing temporary increases in prices related to dislocations from the pandemic or volatile commodity prices,” the IMF said in its report.
Rising real yields are also a concern for the ECB.
The main worry is that if borrowing costs rise for euro governments.
Even before the economy has really turned the page on the crisis, this could jeopardize the entire recovery.