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Analysis

2023: A year of transition with many surprises

Almost one year ago, we labeled 2023 as ‘a year of transition to what?’ based on the view that inflation would decline, that official interest rates would reach their peak and a concern that the disinflation process could be bumpy. 2023 has brought us many surprises: the resilience of the labour market in the US and the Eurozone, the extent of monetary tightening, the risk appetite of investors. The biggest surprise was the growth performance of the US economy. Towards the end of the year, the changing message from the Federal Reserve -and to a lesser degree of certain ECB governing council members- with respect to the monetary policy outlook has brought us a another favourable surprise and a hopeful note for 2024.

As the year draws to a close, the time has come to look back and ahead. We will do the latter in our first issue of 2024 and focus in this editorial on 2023. Almost one year ago, we labeled 2023 as ‘a year of transition to what?’. The word transition referred to our belief that inflation would decline and that official interest rates would reach their peak. Subdued growth -we expected that the US and the Eurozone would spend part of the year in recession-, would pave the way for more disinflation, gradual rate cuts and a soft recovery in 2024. The reference to ‘transition to what?’ expressed the view that the journey could be bumpy due to a new, significant and lasting increase in the price of gas, a slower than expected decline in inflation or an impact of past rate hikes that would be bigger than anticipated.

Comparing forecasts with reality can be a sobering exercise and for some variables this was clearly the case in 2023, as illustrated in table 1. The column ‘December 2022’ refers to projections for 2023 published in December 2022. The column ‘December 2023’ refers to the estimates for 2023 published this month. For growth and inflation, the data show annual averages except for the Federal Reserve’s Summary of Economic Projections, which show percent changes from the fourth quarter of the previous year to the fourth quarter of the year indicated. Interest rate forecasts are for the end of the calendar year.

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