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2015: Our economic crossroads

December 23, 2014 15:29

By

Alex Brummer,

Alex Brummer

5 min read

The unexpected fall in the Brent crude oil price to below $60 a barrel is the biggest known unknown as we enter the next secular New Year. It will shape events in the global economy, the British economy and the Middle East. The world enters 2015 at a crossroads.

The major Anglo-Saxon economies are doing very nicely thank you. Britain, and London in particular, will continue to prosper. That success is partly the flipside to the crisis in Russia, the Ukraine and the Eurozone as the UK maintains its “safe haven” status. It is a good home for the wealthy and the middle-classes from overseas, seeking to protect their capital.

Elsewhere, the Eurozone and Japan are on the brink of stagnation and deflation. The dislocation in Europe is particularly disturbing in that it risks that the trends to political extremism on the right and the left risk the build-up of xenophobia with minorities, including Jewish communities, caught in the cross-hairs. China is slowing and the main Middle East oil exporters face the twin challenges of strategic upheaval and sharply reduced revenues.

Israel’s generally robust economy is suffering from security upheavals following Operation “Protective Edge”, the uncertainty of an upcoming general election and continued internal stresses created by wide income inequalities. But its status as one of the world’s leading hi-tech centres outside of Silicon Valley will be a continued source of strength.
One of the big surprises of the past year has been the prevalence of themes relating to the cyber-economy with the battle over Sony’s film The Interview symptomatic of the challenges ahead for the digital world. Amid this background of turmoil, uncertainty and technological change, here are my top 10 forecasts for the economy, business and finance in 2015: