Submitted by Tyler Durden on
07/16/2012 10:20 -0400
The IMF believes that advanced economy deficits will decline by about 0.75
percentage points of GDP this year which 'strikes a compromise between restoring
fiscal sustainability and supporting growth". However, continued focus
on nominal deficit targets runs the risk of compelling excessive fiscal
tightening if growth weakens. In addition, there is a risk in the
United States of political gridlock that puts fiscal policy on autopilot and
results in a sharp and sudden decline in deficits—the “fiscal
cliff.” What is more troubling is the significant upward revision to
all of the peripheral European nations (with Greece now at 171% Debt/GDP in 2013 versus
160.9% forecast only 3 months ago). While the average debt-to-GDP ratio
among advanced economies is projected to continue to rise over the next two
years, surpassing 110 percent of GDP on average in 2013, debt ratios will by
then have peaked in several advanced economies - though rather explosively
they do not see debt ratios for Spain and Japan
stabilizing.
Debt/GDP ratios seen rising across Europe and most specifically Greece is losing it again and Spain bleeding fast...

Spain and Japan are seen to have debt ratios that are not stabilizing...

IMF2
Debt/GDP ratios seen rising across Europe and most specifically Greece is losing it again and Spain bleeding fast...

Spain and Japan are seen to have debt ratios that are not stabilizing...

IMF2

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