³Ô¹ÏÍøÕ¾

Composite Leading Indicators , OECD, October 2020

20%20%28PDF%29″ href=”https://www.oecd.org/sdd/leading-indicators/composite-leading-indicators-cli-oecd-10-2020.pdf”>Download the entire news release (PDF 900 KB)

08/10/2020 – OECD Composite leading indicators (CLIs) for September continue to recover from the Covid-19 crisis lows, but at a moderating pace.

For all major OECD economies, the CLIs in September continue to signal that GDP will remain below trend. While in France and Germany the CLIs are now pointing to a stabilisation in growth, in the United States, Japan, United Kingdom, Canada and Italy they continue to point to a moderation in growth.

Among major emerging economies, the CLIs for India and Russia continue to signal moderating growth. This is now also the assessment for Brazil (albeit with the level of GDP expected to be above trend). In China, the CLI (for manufacturing) points to a stabilisation in growth.

With the resurgence of COVID-19 cases in many countries, there remains considerable uncertainty around the possibility of future mitigation measures that may curtail economic activity, and which may not be fully factored into current indicators used in the construction of the CLIs. As such this month’s CLIs should continue to be interpreted with care.

As always, the magnitude of the CLI should be regarded as an indication of the strength of the signal rather than as a measure of the degree of growth in economic activity.

CLIs point to a moderation in growth

Visit the interactive to explore this data further.

The above graph show country specific composite leading indicators (CLIs solid line, left axis and the relative month-on-month growth rate, right axis). Turning points of CLIs tend to precede turning points in economic activity relative to trend by six to nine months. The horizontal line at 100 represents the trend of economic activity. Shaded triangles mark confirmed turning-points of the CLI. Blank triangles mark provisional turning-points that may be reversed

> Access data:

  • of CLI and reference series for 33 OECD member countries and 6 major non-member economies.

Watch our video explaining how

the Composite Leading Indicators are compiled

Please note that in the video “business cycle” should be understood as the growth cycle (deviation to trend), and that the term “recession” should be understood as an economic slowdown rather than a recession.

Do you need help with our data? Please consult:

/Public Release. View in full .