Growth Expected to Slow in 2010 for Rich Countries
By wchung | 22 Apr, 2026
Growth in leading rich economies will slow in the first half of this year, with the United States and Japan outpacing sluggish Europe, the OECD group of developed countries said Wednesday.
The Paris-based Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development links the slowdown to the end of some government stimulus programs and the emptying of inventory stocks — all while the recovery and labor markets remain frail after the worst global recession in decades.
Most of the growth this year is expected in countries not addressed in the report, such as China, India and Brazil.
Still, “overall it is an encouraging picture,” OECD chief economist Pier Carlo Padoan told a news conference about the agency’s report on the Group of Seven industrial economies. “It is stronger in the United States and Japan, it is not as strong in Europe.”
The OECD forecast that U.S. gross domestic product would rise 2.4 percent in the first quarter and 2.3 percent in the second quarter, down from 5.6 percent in the fourth quarter of last year. Forecasts for Japan are 1.1 percent and 2.3 percent for the first two quarters of 2010, down from 3.8 percent in the fourth quarter 2009.
Forecasts for Germany fell, however, blamed on a slump in construction activity.
The OECD urged rich governments to end stimulus programs next year or earlier to avoid sinking deeper into debt. But it warned that they should do so gradually and carefully.
“Despite some encouraging signs on activity, the fragility of the recovery, a frail labour market and possible headwinds coming from financial markets underscore the need for caution in the removal of policy support,” the report said. “Consolidation should start in 2011, or earlier where needed, and progress gradually so as not to undermine the incipient recovery.”
PARIS (AP)
Recent Articles
- Misuse of Anthropic's Mythos Vulnerability Detector Exposes Platforms to Cybersecurity Risk
- S. Korea March Producer Prices Rose at Fastest Pace in Over 3 Years
- Virginians Passes Democratic Redistricting to Target 4 GOP Congressional Seats
- SpaceX Holds Option to Buy AI Coding Startup Cursor for $60 Billion
- OpenAI Probed for ChatGPT's Tips to Shooter in Deadly Florida University Shooting
- Vingroup's Vinfast EV Unit to Break Even in 2027
- Trump Extends Ceasefire Unilaterally
- Anterior to the Heart
- Meta to Capture Employee Mouse Movements, Keystrokes for AI Training
- Judge Blocks Trump Policies Stymying Solar, Wind Projects
