Following the financial and economic crisis leading to the recession of 2008-09, and the sluggish economic activity between
2012 and 2015 (+0.7 percent p.a.), economic growth gained sustained momentum from mid-2016. For 2017 and 2018, WIFO expects
annual GDP growth of 2.9 and 3.2 percent, respectively. An average annual increase of 2.1 percent is expected for the forecast
period 2018 to 2022, up from a modest +1.3 percent p.a. recorded for 2013 to 2017. The expected rate would thereby exceed
the euro area average by ¼ percentage point. The favourable external business environment will stimulate export growth (+4.1
percent p.a.) and encourage investment in new machinery and equipment. Rising disposable household income will allow private
consumption to gain 1½ percent per year, after +0.7 percent p.a. in the previous five-year period. Buoyant growth in 2018
and 2019 will stimulate job creation beyond the increase in the labour force and lead to lower unemployment. However, from
2020 onwards, labour supply may again grow in excess of demand, with the unemployment rate edging up from 7.3 percent in 2019
to 7.6 percent in 2022. Inflation remains moderate over the medium term, and the inflation differential vis-à-vis the euro
area average should narrow. The Consumer Price Index is expected to increase at an average 1.9 percent per year. Under our
assumptions for future business conditions and policy settings, the general government account may reach balance as from the
middle of the forecast period, both in headline (Maastricht) and structural terms. As a result, the ratio of government debt
to nominal GDP would fall to around 63 percent by 2022, down by 20 percentage points from 2016.
Keywords:Medium-term forecast, government households, Austria
Forschungsbereich:Makroökonomie und öffentliche Finanzen