
Outlook 2023: It’s not every day that Europe gets lucky By Agnès Belaisch
Inflation and the tightening of financing conditions have led everyone to expect some degree of recession this year. The US is expected to slow down because a large savings buffer and a vibrant job market make the US consumer able to withstand more expensive goods and services. This is an enviable position compared to the recession anticipated in Europe. However, an unusual combination of luck and fear produced the fall in energy demand that Europe needed and the 2023 outlook for the region is more optimistic.
Disentangling India’s new national carbon market![]() By Kamya Choudhary and Rob Macquarie India’s emissions are the third-largest globally, and its government is taking comprehensive action to reach its goal of net zero by 2070. Read the full commentary → |
MEETINGS ![]() Outlook 2023: Foreign exchange market developments Monday 23 January, Roundtable Mark Sobel, US chairman at OMFIF, is joined by a panel of experts to discuss the 2023 foreign exchange market outlook. Register → |
ON DEMAND ![]() EU bonds: towards sovereign status Siegfried Ruhl, hors classe adviser to the director-general for budget at the European Commission, talks with Clive Horwood, OMFIF’s managing editor and deputy CEO, about the European Union’s borrowing plans for 2023. Listen → |
LATEST REPORT![]() SPI Journal, Winter 2023 This edition of the SPI journal examines the growth of carbon markets and the use of carbon-linked bonds to drive capital for renewable energy investment. Download → |







