In early 2017, Austria's GDP growth recorded the highest rate in six years, benefitting from a benign combination of external
factors. First, China's demand for imports has picked up since 2016, which provided stimulus not only to its East Asian neighbours
and commodity exporters like Russia, but also to advanced economies like Austria (mainly via supplies to German companies),
since domestic manufacturers of machinery and other investment goods are closely integrated into global value chains. Second,
the investment backlog in East-Central Europe caused by delays in the disbursement of EU subsidies in 2016, is gradually being
cleared. Indeed, Austrian exports are currently advantaged on several fronts, as investment in early 2017 has rebounded strongly
also in the USA, with positive repercussions for Austrian manufacturers.
These benign incentives are expected to last for the remainder of the current year, as companies are highly satisfied with
their current business situation and optimistic for the months to come. Beyond 2017, investment behaviour in East-Central
Europe should return to normal, and policy in the USA looks set to favour tax cuts rather than embarking on large-scale investment
projects. It is also doubtful whether the investment boom in China will continue; information received in recent months suggests
that the momentum of world trade has weakened. For this reason, the pace of growth in Austria is expected to decelerate over
the forecast period.
Overall, demand and output will nevertheless remain on a firm upward path in 2018, thanks to robust domestic demand. Although
the stimulating effects of the tax cuts on private consumption are wearing off, the decline in unemployment will strengthen
disposable income and demand of private households. It would nevertheless be too soon to sound the all-clear for the labour
market, since the bulk of the newly created jobs will not be filled by the domestic labour reserve. The inflow of foreign
workers is unabated notably from those East-Central European countries for which access to the Austrian labour market has
been liberalised in 2011 and 2013. Older and low-qualified jobseekers remain longer on the unemployment register and add to
the structural component of unemployment.
The general government deficit will turn out significantly lower in 2017 than last year. Major reasons are higher GDP growth,
one-off factors related to the tax reform (anticipation effects 2015 which dampened capital gains tax revenues in 2016) and
to retirement benefits (lumpsum payment of 100 per head in 2016), the phasing out of subsidies for banks in distress,
and a further decline in debt service cost. On the revenue side, the fiscal stance remains expansionary in 2017, since part
of the tax cuts have taken effect only this year and the employers' contribution to the Family Benefit Fund has been lowered.
For 2018, a major uncertainty relates to the general election carried forward to October 2017; it is likely that, in the first
instance, a provisional budget will extrapolate current expenditure trends.
The forecast risks for GDP growth are on balance upward bound. The "Initiative 20,000" could make a contribution towards reducing
structural unemployment, while the "Employment Bonus" may trigger additional investment. Moreover, the positive stimulus to
foreign trade may last longer than assumed in the projection. On the other hand, the global situation holds a number of downside
risks, such as the "Brexit" negotiations or the high stock market values worldwide, where a downward correction may unsettle
the fragile European financial sector. Looming military conflicts in the Middle East pose a risk to oil prices since Iran
is in control of large parts of daily crude oil shipments.