In the United States, surveys overstate the economic slowdown. After several quarters of very high growth, economic activity is slowing down across the Atlantic, a slowdown that was both expected and desirable. While this slowdown is real, it appears overestimated by survey data. Hard data on activity shows a much more limited slowdown. While household goods consumption and the labour market are slowing, services consumption, industrial production and business investment remain well oriented. Overall, hard data reinforces our scenario of growth stabilising around 2% in the United States, its pre-covid level. With the confirmation of the decline in inflation, this scenario should allow the Federal Reserve to lower interest rates in the coming months.
In the euro area, growth would remain positive but more moderate and uncertain. In the euro area, the context remains different from that of the United States, with a still moderate level of activity. In addition to surveys that still appear soft, hard data gives mixed signals, with industrial activity in particular continuing to disappoint. Hard data and confidence indices still signal a divergence between the robustness of sectors related to business investment (a powerful growth engine in 2022-23) and the weakness of household consumption (especially in durable goods such as automobiles). Nevertheless, the decline in inflation in a context of tight labour market and strong wage growth should boost real disposable income for households and, in the long term, consumption. We continue to expect moderate but positive growth, supported by the decline in inflation and then interest rates in the second half of the year.