Executives confident despite double-dip recession fears

Executives confident despite double-dip recession fears

By Deb Gutierrez | Jul 28, 2010

The risk that some of the world's major economies may fall back into recession is foremost among executives' concerns for the second half of 2010, according to new research conducted by the Economist Intelligence Unit. When presented with a series of 11 potential risks to the economy over the next six months, almost one-third of the 680 respondents to a global survey point to double-dip recession as the biggest, ahead of sovereign debt default (20%), market volatility (10%) and weak governance (9%).

North American (43%) and Asia-Pacific (40%) respondents are most concerned about the possibility that the economy will once again slip into recession against 29% from western Europe. The North American sentiment seems to echo US Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke's warning of last week, that the US economy faced "uncertain prospects".

With the nascent recovery so fragile, it is not surprising that weak demand is seen by executives as the top risk to their business over the next six months. More than one-third (36%) of respondents cited this concern, ahead of worries about volatility in financial markets (19%), difficulty in raising finance (18%) and general market volatility (16%).
 
Respondents from the manufacturing, automotive, mining and related sectors also see other factors-including the volatile price of raw materials, exchange rate fluctuations and instability in their major markets-as significant risks.

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