With the global economic climate improving, activity is picking up in the domestic manufacturing sector. The WIFO business
survey for the second quarter indicates a marked brightening-up of production expectations. Domestic demand, on the other
hand, is still subdued. Employment is below, the number of job-seekers significantly above the year-earlier level. The WIFO
business survey for the second quarter 2002 confirms the cyclical turnaround in manufacturing industry. Production expectations
have rebounded strongly from the trough in the fourth quarter 2001, with the balance of positive and negative judgements swinging
from –2.7 to +8.3 percentage points. As is typical for a nascent recovery, the business climate has improved most in the sectors
of basic and intermediate goods (iron and steel, foundries) and of investment goods (machine tools, electronic equipment,
vehicles). Actual data for output and demand only go as far as the beginning of the year; they show a substantial decline
in manufacturing output in January and February (–5½ percent according to the production index), while goods exports in January
(+1¾ percent in nominal terms) and wholesale turnover in the first two months (+¾ percent on average at constant prices) were
slightly higher than a year ago. The world economic climate is turning more positive. In the USA, GDP expanded in the first
quarter by 1½ percent year-on-year (following the European way of calculating), owing to massive spending by consumers and
by public authorities. Still, the increase in industrial production and the present level of capacity utilisation are not
yet providing major incentives for firms to step up investment. The recovery in the USA is having a positive impact also on
the business climate in Europe. Firms and consumers see further developments notably more optimistic now than at the end of
last year. A major dampening factor here is the persistent weakness of consumer and construction demand in Germany. In Austria,
the pick-up in business activity is largely driven by exports, whereas domestic demand is still weak, as witnessed also by
the slump in imports (down by 2¼ percent year-on-year in nominal terms in the fourth quarter 2001, and by 6¼ percent in January).
Private household demand should increase slightly, due in part to gains in disposable income. Contractual wages have been
up by 2.4 percent in March, ½ percentage point more than the rate of inflation of 1.9 percent. Retail sales edged up by 0.9
percent in volume early this year, supported also by an excellent winter season in tourism. Gross earnings from tourism services
between November and March exceeded the year-earlier level by 7½ percent, while overnight stays rose by 3¼ percent. For the
construction sector, production data do not yet signal a recovery. Nevertheless, the latest WIFO business survey points to
a timid improvement in confidence. The number of construction workers keeps falling markedly year-on-year. Employment is also
down in large parts of manufacturing industry, where last year's fall in output is being reflected in the workforce and jobless
figures with the usual time lag. A turnaround in the overall labour market situation is not yet visible. The total of actively
employed is significantly lower than a year ago (–16,000 in April), the unemployment figure considerably higher (+40,000).
Keywords:Business Cycle Analysis; Austria; Recovery of Industrial Activity – No Turnaround as Yet in Construction and the Labour Market
Forschungsbereich:Makroökonomie und öffentliche Finanzen
Sprache:Englisch