2013 will look very much like 2012, Nouriel Roubini wrote in an article for Project Syndicate on Monday. Global growth will average about 3%, he wrote, but he expects a "multi-speed recovery" with near-trend growth rates of 5% in emerging markets and much lower, below-trend rates of 1% in developed economies.
Unlike last year, however, Roubini expects "painful deleveraging" in most developed economies, and he predicts austerity will spread from the eurozone. "Given synchronized fiscal retrenchment in most advanced economies, another year of mediocre growth could give way to outright contraction in some countries," he wrote.
Indeed, most major economies have already engaged in some kind of quantitative easing: the European Central Bank, the U.S. Federal Reserve, the Bank of England and the Swiss National Bank, with the Bank of Japan likely to follow. It was these banks' "unconventional" monetary policies that led to growth in risky assets in the latter half of 2012, not improved fundamentals, Roubini wrote.
Roubini outlined five major risks investors face in the coming months.
First, the stress of the fiscal cliff is not gone forever. Roubini noted that "sooner or later, another ugly fight will take place on the debt ceiling, the delayed sequester of spending, and a congressional 'continuing spending resolution.'"