Westpac Regional Economic Report Third Quarter 2008 Edition
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Highlights
Global financial and economic conditions have moved significantly in recent months, with the intensification of the global credit crisis. In this Report we consider the implications for commodities and regional Australia of the credit crisis and the associated deterioration in world economic growth prospects
Global commodity prices, not surprisingly, corrected sharply lower during September and October. Commodity price forecasts for 2009 have in general been marked down as a result. For Australian commodity prices there are some key points to be mindful of in this time of general 'doom and gloom'. The Australian dollar is playing a cushioning role, as it typically does during such volatile times
Moreover, a feature of this global economic cycle is the wedge between conditions in the advanced economies and emerging markets. The advanced economies are expected to stall in 2009. The silver lining is that in the emerging economies, growth is slowing not slumping. This is significant because of the increasingly important role of emerging countries demand for a number of commodities, both soft and bulks
Also, it is important not to lose sight of key underlying structural fundamentals for many commodities. These fundamentals will reassert themselves as the current global slowdown passes.
The report is available below in both PDF and RTF formats. Access previous issues in our archives.
Background information on this report can be found at the bottom of this page.
To provide economic insight and forecasts into key industries focusing on commodity prices and financial indicators relevant to regional Australia, including an outlook on interest rates and the Australian dollar.
Author
The report is produced by Westpac. Its editor is Justin Smirk, Westpac Senior Agribusiness Economist.
Frequency
Quarterly
Data Source
Data is collected from various sources with all forecasts and commentary provided by Westpac's specialist economic team