AS per OECD, the real GDP in OECD has grown by
0.5% in the first quarter of 2011. Although
private consumption remained the main driver of growth in the OECD as a whole,
its contribution to growth fell in nearly all major economies. At 0.2 percentage
point, private consumption’s
contribution to OECD growth fell to its lowest level since the second quarter
of 2009.
In the United States, private consumption and stockbuilding were the major
contributors to GDP growth (0.4 and 0.3 percentage point, respectively), partially
offset by negative contributions from investment and government consumption.
In Germany, robust GDP growth of 1.5% was driven by investment; which contributed
0.9 percentage point, and net exports, which contributed 0.5 percentage point.
In Canada, investment and stockbuilding were the main contributors to GDP growth,
but with a sharp fall in the contribution of private consumption when compared
to the previous quarter. In France, real GDP growth was mainly driven by stockbuilding.
In Italy, net exports were the main contributor to GDP growth, but with a significant
offset through destocking. In the United Kingdom, net exports made a significant
contribution (1.4 percentage point) to GDP growth, but with offsets coming
from private consumption, investment and destocking.
|