Sorry, but your login has failed. Please recheck your login information and resubmit. If your subscription has expired, renew here.
The outlook for the global economy in 2016 is a mixed bag, with positive news for the U.S. economy and choppy forecasts for other parts of the world. Economists at IHS Global Insight continue to forecast 3.0 percent global real GDP growth in 2016. That growth, however, will not be felt across the global board as downward revisions to the forecasts for Brazil, Canada, Japan, Russia, and the United Kingdom are offset by an upward revision to U.S. growth.
“We expect some of the demand-side constraints on growth (deleveraging and austerity, weak trade growth, and the slowdown in China) to ease in the coming year,” says IHS Chief Economist Nariman Behravesh. “Yet, the longer-term deceleration in the global economy will not reverse without aggressive policy actions to alleviate supply constraints.”
As for the United States, Behravesh says “the economy keeps chugging along,” while the Federal Reserve holds fire. Second-quarter real GDP growth was revised up from 3.7 percent to 3.9 percent owing to more robust growth in domestic demand, including consumer spending, capital expenditures, and residential investment. The need to work down elevated levels of inventories will restrain near-term growth.
![]() |
This complete article is available to subscribers
only. Click on Log In Now at the top of this article for full access. Or, Start your PLUS+ subscription for instant access. |
SC
MR
Sorry, but your login has failed. Please recheck your login information and resubmit. If your subscription has expired, renew here.
![]() |
Download Article PDF |
The outlook for the global economy in 2016 is a mixed bag, with positive news for the U.S. economy and choppy forecasts for other parts of the world. Economists at IHS Global Insight continue to forecast 3.0 percent global real GDP growth in 2016. That growth, however, will not be felt across the global board as downward revisions to the forecasts for Brazil, Canada, Japan, Russia, and the United Kingdom are offset by an upward revision to U.S. growth.
“We expect some of the demand-side constraints on growth (deleveraging and austerity, weak trade growth, and the slowdown in China) to ease in the coming year,” says IHS Chief Economist Nariman Behravesh. “Yet, the longer-term deceleration in the global economy will not reverse without aggressive policy actions to alleviate supply constraints.”
As for the United States, Behravesh says “the economy keeps chugging along,” while the Federal Reserve holds fire. Second-quarter real GDP growth was revised up from 3.7 percent to 3.9 percent owing to more robust growth in domestic demand, including consumer spending, capital expenditures, and residential investment. The need to work down elevated levels of inventories will restrain near-term growth.
![]() |
SUBSCRIBERS: Click here to download PDF of the full article. |
SC
MR

Latest Supply Chain News
Latest Resources

Explore
Topics
Latest Supply Chain News
- AI-powered supply chains require work redesign, not just process automation
- Look who’s calling (from Mexico): Gang members deported from the U.S.
- Why procurement pricing breaks in cloud ERP migrations
- NextGen 2026 Keynotes announced
- How Do You Really Do It?: Get ROI from digital transformation
- How industrial real estate decisions are shaping supply chain performance
- More latest news
Latest Resources

Subscribe

Supply Chain Management Review delivers the best industry content.

Editors’ Picks

