|

Finland: farewell to austerity

The Finnish economy continues to slow down after a strong three-year expansion. GDP grew 1.2% y/y in Q2 19, largely on the back of public consumption and surprisingly strong services exports. Private consumption recovered from a very weak Q1. Economic sentiment has cooled somewhat in 2019, the export outlook is murky and investment activity looks more cautious. The government has announced its budget plan, which expands expenditure and leads to a slightly larger deficit than we had forecast earlier. We expect GDP to grow 1.2% in 2019 and 0.8% in 2020.

The central government budget deficit is set to rise to over EUR2bn in 2020. Despite a lower GDP growth outlook and a more generous central government budget, we expect only a modest 0.4% general government budget deficit per GDP. A smaller deficit at the local government level and a surplus in social security lend some support to the overall numbers. The general government debt to GDP ratio fell from 60.8% to 58.7% in 2018, according to our latest estimate based on the revised GDP numbers. We expect the debt ratio to keep falling in 2019-20, but ageing will hit public finances hard over the next decade. This means the space for active fiscal policy is more limited than the current numbers would suggest.

Private and public consumption play a major role in the outlook, while exports are flattening and corporate investment activity looks cautious. Employment improved markedly in 2018, but its development has been unimpressive in 2019. Open vacancies are still plentiful, but a lack of skilled labour has kept many vacancies open. Thanks to rising wages, low inflation and very low interest rates, the outlook for private consumption is generally positive. Consumers have become somewhat cautious, however, and part of the growing income is flowing to savings.

The sovereign rating outlook has improved in recent years, but the rating agencies need further evidence of sustained growth and successful structural reforms to make an actual rating upgrade. There is a pause in many reforms, because the new left-leaning government is only just starting to draw up serious plans. Labour market reforms look unconvincing so far and social & healthcare reform is not high on the agenda. The sovereign rating is likely to remain unchanged for a while, we believe.

Download The Full Finland Research

Author

Danske Research Team

Danske Research Team

Danske Bank A/S

Research is part of Danske Bank Markets and operate as Danske Bank's research department. The department monitors financial markets and economic trends of relevance to Danske Bank Markets and its clients.

More from Danske Research Team
Share:

Editor's Picks

EUR/USD extends its optimism past 1.1900

EUR/USD retains a firm underlying bid, surpassing the 1.1900 mark as the NA session draws to a close on Monday. The pair’s persistent uptrend comes as the US Dollar remains on the defensive, with traders staying cautious ahead of upcoming US NFP prints and CPI data.
 

GBP/USD tilts bullish as markets barrel toward mid-week NFP print

GBP/USD is holding a broader bullish structure on the daily chart, with price trading well above the 50 Exponential Moving Average at 1.3507 and the 200 EMA at 1.3310, confirming the intermediate uptrend that has been in place since the November 2025 low near 1.2300. 

Gold pushes back above $5,000

The daily chart shows spot Gold in a parabolic uptrend that accelerated sharply from the $4,600 area in late January, printing a record high at $5,598.25 before a violent reversal erased nearly $1,000 in value during the final days of the month. 

Litecoin eyes $50 as heavy losses weigh on investors

Following a strong downtrend across the crypto market over the past week, Litecoin holders are under immense pressure. The Bitcoin fork has trimmed about $1.81 billion from its market capitalization since the beginning of the year, sending it below the top 20 cryptos by market cap.

Japanese PM Takaichi nabs unprecedented victory – US data eyed this week

I do not think I would be exaggerating to say that Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s snap general election gamble paid off over the weekend – and then some. This secured the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) an unprecedented mandate just three months into her tenure.

Ripple exposed to volatility amid low retail interest, modest fund inflows

Ripple (XRP) is extending its intraday decline to around $1.40 at the time of writing on Monday amid growing pressure from the retail market and risk-off sentiment that continues to keep investors on the sidelines.