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2022’s unlikely economic winners

In financial terms the past year has been bad for almost everyone. Inflation of 10% year-on-year across the rich world has slashed household incomes. Investors have lost out as global stockmarkets have plunged by 15%. Yet this poor aggregate performance hides wide differences: some countries have done pretty well.

In order to assess these differences, The Economist has compiled data on five economic and financial indicators—gdp, inflation, inflation breadth, stockmarket performance and government debt—for 34 mostly rich countries. We have ranked each economy according to how well it has done on each measure, creating an overall score. The table below shows the ranking, and includes some unexpected results.

For the first time in a while, the economic party is happening in the Mediterranean. Top of our list is Greece. Other countries that plumbed the economic depths in the early 2010s, such as Portugal and Spain, also score highly. They are not the only pleasant surprises. Despite political chaos, Israel did well. Meanwhile, despite political stability, Germany is an underperformer. Two Baltic countries, Estonia and Latvia, which won plaudits in the 2010s for speedy reforms, come bottom.

gdp, usually the best measure of economic health, is our first indicator. Norway (helped by high oil prices) and Turkey (by sanctions-busting trade with Russia) have done better than most. The fallout from covid-19 also looms large. Thanks to super-strict lockdowns and a collapse in inbound tourism, a year ago much of southern Europe was in dire straits. The region was due a decent year. Tourist visits to the Balearics recently surpassed their pre-pandemic level. As your correspondent discovered on a recent trip, Ibiza is so busy it is difficult to book a taxi or find a spot at a half-decent restaurant.

Ireland probably had a strong year, though one not nearly as strong as gdp numbers suggest. The activities of big multinational companies, many registered there for tax purposes, distort the figures. By contrast, America’s gdp numbers are misleadingly weak: statisticians have struggled to account for the impact of enormous stimulus packages.

More granular data fill in the picture. Our second measure is the change in the price level since the end of 2021. Away from the world’s attention, some countries have seen rather low inflation. In Switzerland consumer prices have risen by just 3%. The central bank, helped along by a strong currency, responded quickly to the rise in prices earlier this year. Countries which have non-Russian sources of energy—such as Spain, which gets its gas from Algeria—have also done better than average. Those reliant on Vladimir Putin have truly suffered. In Latvia average consumer prices have risen by 20% this year.

Our third measure also relates to inflation. It calculates the share of items in each country’s inflation basket which have risen by more than 2% in the past year. This provides an indication of how entrenched inflation is—and therefore hints at how quickly inflation will fall in 2023. Some countries with high headline inflation have nonetheless been able to limit its breadth. In Italy, for instance, consumer prices have risen by 11% this year, yet “only” two-thirds of its inflation basket has above-target inflation. Japanese inflation also looks like it may fade soon. Britain is in more trouble. The price of every category in its basket is rising fast.

People’s sense of economic wellbeing does not just come from prices in the shops. They also look at the value of their pension pots and stock portfoliso. In some countries it has been a terrible year for these sorts of investments. Share prices in both Germany and South Korea are down by close to 20% this year, double America’s decline. Swedish stocks have done even worse. Yet there are spots of strength. Norway’s stockmarket is up on the year. So is Britain’s, populated by dull, plodding companies, which tend to be rewarded when economic times are tough.

Our final measure concerns the change in net government debt as a share of gdp. In the short run governments can paper over economic cracks by raising spending or cutting taxes. But this can create more debt and thus the need to turn the fiscal screws in the future. Some governments have spent lavishly to cope with the cost-of-living squeeze. Germany has allocated funds worth 7% of gdp to help with energy costs, meaning its debt-to-gdp ratio has risen. Other countries have pulled back from the fiscal splurge, helping to right the fiscal ship. Public debt in southern European countries seems to be on the way down.

Will the gap between 2022’s winners and losers persist in 2023? Before long southern Europe’s economic growth, weighed down by rapidly ageing populations and high debts, will surely fall back to less stellar levels. And there are signs that in countries such as America and Britain, high inflation may finally be easing, helping them up the rankings.

Along other dimensions differences may persist, not least when it comes to those countries reliant on Mr Putin for their energy supplies. Against the odds, many such countries did manage to replenish their stores of natural gas before winter—but only by paying outrageous prices. With supplies now largely cut off, 2023 will be a lot more difficult. That will be a concern in the Baltics, but less so on the other side of Europe. It is hard to worry about gas supplies while eating a giant plate of squid on an Ibicencan beach.

Source: Finance - economist.com

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