
(AGENPARL) – SEATTLE (WASHINGTON) mer 29 giugno 2022
Survey
Economic conditions outlook, June 2022
Just one quarter after geopolitical conflicts and instability overtook the COVID-19 pandemic as the leading risk to economic growth, survey respondents’ concerns over inflation now exceed their worries about the effects of geopolitical issues on their countries’ economies. In the latest McKinsey Global Survey on economic conditions, respondents also see inflation as a growing threat to the global economy and continue to view geopolitical instability and supply chain disruptions among the top threats to both global and domestic growth.
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The online survey was in the field from June 6 to June 10, 2022, and garnered responses from 899 participants representing the full range of regions, industries, company sizes, functional specialties, and tenures. To adjust for differences in response rates, the data are weighted by the contribution of each respondent’s nation to global GDP.
Amid this disruption-crowded environment, respondents report uneasy views on economic conditions, both globally and in their respective countries. For the fourth quarter in a row, respondents to our latest survey—conducted the first full week in June—are less likely than those in the previous survey to say economic conditions have improved. Overall, pessimism about the second half of 2022 is on par with the early months of the pandemic in 2020. Exceptionally, however, the mood is much more positive among respondents in Asia–Pacific and Greater China, who report improvements and continue to be upbeat about their economic prospects.
Inflation, geopolitical, and supply chain concerns all loom large
Respondents’ views of the top threats to their home economies have shifted since March 2022,
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The March 2022 survey was the first survey since December 2019 in which the COVID-19 pandemic was not one of the top five most-cited risks to domestic growth. From March 2020 through December 2021, the pandemic was the most-cited risk all but once. In the latest survey, it is the seventh-most-cited risk.
and they now most often cite inflation as a risk over the next year (Exhibit 1). While geopolitical conflicts were top of mind in the previous quarter’s survey, which ran four days after Russia had invaded Ukraine, respondents are now nearly half as likely to cite geopolitical issues as a risk to their countries’ economies. Geopolitical conflicts and instability remain an outsize concern in Europe, where 50 percent list it among their top risks. But even in Europe, inflation is the risk cited most often—as it is in every geography except Greater China.
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“Greater China” includes respondents in Hong Kong and Taiwan.
There, respondents most often point to the COVID-19 pandemic.