(Bloomberg) -- The Federal Reserve's dovish turn is being followed worldwide as policy makers across the globe take a breather from raising interest rates amid slowing inflation and economic growth.
The Reserve Bank of India was the boldest as it unexpectedly cut interest rates, but counterparts in the U.K. and Australia also turned more pessimistic.
Here's our weekly wrap of what's going on in the world economy.
Following the Fed
The Fed's decision of last week to put rate hikes on hold set the tone for the world. India's new central bank chief delivered a cut which will likely be welcomed by Prime Minister Narendra Modi as an election nears. Australian central bank chief Philip Lowe said the outlook there is “more evenly balanced” and his team followed with a slashing of economic growth forecasts. The Bank of England cited Brexit in cutting its growth projections. Officials in the Philippines pared their inflation forecasts and those in Thailand also held, speaking less hawkishly. In Latin America, Brazil's central bankers signaled politicians would have to cut costs before they can reduce rates and those in Mexico held, citing a litany of risks including peso weakness and global trade tensions.
Meantime, Japan is about to mark 20 years since it adopted zero rates, a salient warning to others about just how long "extraordinary" monetary settings can last.
Read More
- Land of Cheap Money Marks 20 Years of Zero Rates
- ECB Said to Need More Convincing on Long-Term Loans
- Who Will Be the Next Bank of England Governor?
Back at the Fed
Chairman Jerome Powell got to spend his 66th birthday having steak dinner with President Donald Trump, although the outlook for monetary policy was apparently not discussed. The next day, Powell gave a brief speech in which he said “the U.S. economy is now in a good place.” Other officials echoed that position and backed up the decision to take a pause from lifting rates.
Read More
- What's Got Inflation So Depressed?
- Yellen Says Next Fed Move Could Be Up or Down
- Dudley Urges Investors to Watch Economy Not Balance Sheet
Global Growth's Winter
Trouble continues to brew all over Europe: Italy's slump and debts are weighing on the euro-area economy, and manufacturing in the continent's growth engine is plunging. The region's executive arm took a dimmer view. Even without Brexit, the British economy faces a huge hurdle with its sluggish productivity. And Venezuela, battling a deepening crisis, could take a lesson from the struggles of Zimbabwe.
Read More:
- Trump Taps Global-Order Critic Malpass to Lead World Bank
- Investors Trapped as Venezuela Sanctions Halt Bond Trading
- Emerging-Market ETFs See Biggest Inflow in Year as Risks Abound
The Two Big Ones
Things aren't looking much better in the world's two biggest economies, who remain in dueling position ahead of a key March 1 deadline to reach a trade deal -- even as President Donald Trump says the talks are going well. There's no Trump-Xi meeting in sight. The U.S. services sector cooled more than expected last month, and things aren't quite as great as Trump touted in his State of the Union address. A long shot to demonstrate bipartisanship, infrastructure could be the key to the U.S. warding off recession. China's economic downturn is weighing on global firms, while the glass-half-full take is that consumer spending has held up and the government has a heavy toolbox. Our key global trade indicators are souring further.
Weekend Reading
- Is American Capitalism Broken? Here Are Seven Possible Fixes
- Arab Spring's Lone Democracy Teeters as Economy Refuses to Heal
- Trump's Boasts of Record Jobs for Black Americans Belied by Data
- Free Money Experiment Set to Reveal First Results
- Coup Hysteria: In Caracas, Rumors and Theories Swirl
Chart of the Week
Wage Pressures Building, Still Lagging Pre-Crisis Levels: Chart
To contact the reporter on this story: Michelle Jamrisko in Singapore at mjamrisko@bloomberg.net
To contact the editors responsible for this story: Simon Kennedy at skennedy4@bloomberg.net;Nasreen Seria at nseria@bloomberg.net;Malcolm Scott at mscott23@bloomberg.net
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