Mastercard Economics Institute’s Economic Outlook 2024: Striking a balance between prices and priori
The start of the 2020s brought unprecedented fluctuations in the global economy, but next year marks a new chapter. In 2024, consumers and businesses large and small will face crucial decisions about spending and investing, where price differentials and interest rates have burrowed into budgets, informing the resources available with less wiggle room. While the global economy will feel more “normal” in the coming year than the prior three, it will still be an economy seeking equilibrium, with a careful balancing of high interest rates, wages and prices compared to pre-pandemic levels. The backdrop, however, remains one of consumer empowerment with moderating inflation and steady real economic growth but with varied regional dynamics.
Each year, the Mastercard Economics Institute draws on a multitude of public and proprietary data sets, including aggregated and anonymized Mastercard sales activity, as well as models that are intended to estimate economic activity to identify the themes that will define the global economy. The “Economic Outlook 2024,” reveals an empowered consumer, inflation decompression and central bank recalibration. Reflecting these global themes, targeted measurements reveal the regional impacts across 45 markets. Here are the key findings from the report with implications for governments:
1. Spending is prioritized on the ‘needs’ and ‘wants’ but not the ‘impulse’
Even with inflation taking a larger chunk of spending on essentials, consumers will prioritize the discretionary spending that matters most, with travel and events remaining popular choices. Through September 2023, American spending on movies and live performances grew 31% compared to 2022, confirmation that Taylor Swift, Beyoncé and “Barbenheimer” captured consumer attention and cemented must-see experiences as part of the cultural zeitgeist. Across the pond, European travelers are opting for wallet-friendly destinations to satisfy their wanderlust at the right price. The Middle East and North Africa region is seeing a particular boost from tourism: Turkey, Egypt and Tunisia were in the top five fastest-growing destinations for Europeans in 2023 compared to 2022, while bookings to Italy, Spain, Portugal and Greece contracted over the same time, a trading-down trend we expect to accelerate in 2024.
2. An employed consumer is an empowered one
The consumer remains resilient — we heard it all year and will again in 2024 as a strong labor market underpins consumer purchasing power. In some cases, this is best reflected by wages outpacing inflation, like in the Eurozone, where wages in September 2023 were up 4.7% year over year, and inflation increased by 4.3%. The easing of monetary policy will help sustain consumer spend in interest-sensitive sectors.
3. Inflationary pressures begin to ease as central banks course-correct
Central banks are likely at or close to peak rates, according to the Mastercard Economics Institute. Some easing is expected next year as inflation cools while growth remains subdued, prompting a partial normalization of monetary policy. Globally, the Mastercard Economics Institute expects inflation to moderate to 4.9% year over year in 2024, down from 6% in 2023, but remaining above the pre-pandemic trend of 2.7%. Despite that, our group predicts global economic growth in the coming year to feel similar to 2023, and anticipate inflation-adjusted GDP to grow 2.9% year over year in 2024.
Takeaways for the Public Sector
As with every new year, many risks remain on the horizon — social and political tensions, geopolitical conflict, cost of living instability and currency depreciations — and any combination of which has the ability to detract or define an economy’s outlook. The main upside risk is that a new technology can trigger a second “new paradigm” productivity boom, and perhaps that’s possible with generative AI or whatever else emerges next year. However, history shows that the timing and magnitude of such a meaningful shift is very hard to pin down. The Economics Institute advises to stay on watch, monitor consumer spend and leverage data insights to inform and shape policies that support sustainable, efficient growth.
About the Mastercard Economics Institute
About the Mastercard Economics Institute
Mastercard Economics Institute launched in 2020 to analyze macroeconomic trends through the lens of the consumer. A team of economists, analysts and data scientists draws on Mastercard insights – including Mastercard SpendingPulse™ – and third-party data to deliver regular reporting on economic issues for key customers, partners and policymakers.
Disclaimer
This Mastercard Economics Institute presentation (This “Presentation”) and content or portions thereof may not be accessed, downloaded, copied, modified, distributed, used or published in any form or media, except as authorized by Mastercard. This presentation and content are intended solely as a research tool for informational purposes and not as investment advice or recommendations for any particular action or investment and should not be relied upon, in whole or in part, as the basis for decision-making or investment purposes. This presentation and content are not guaranteed as to accuracy and are provided on an “as is” basis to authorized users, who review and use this information at their own risk. This presentation and content, including estimated economic forecasts, simulations or scenarios from the Mastercard Economics Institute, do not in any way reflect expectations for (or actual) Mastercard operational or financial performance. The Mastercard Economics Institute uses a multitude of data sets (public and proprietary) as well as models that are intended to estimate trends in economic activity.
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