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Home » TRANSCRIPT: The Global Economic Outlook – WEF 2025

TRANSCRIPT: The Global Economic Outlook – WEF 2025

Read the full transcript of a panel discussion on The Global Economic Outlook 2025 at World Economic Forum on Jan 24, 2025.

Listen to the audio version here:

TRANSCRIPT:

SARA EISEN: Good morning everybody, welcome to the grand finale, we end Davos on a high note here and I’m so excited and honored to be here. My name is Sara Eisen, I’m a host at CNBC and we are going to have the conversation everybody’s been waiting for, the global debate and the global outlook on the economy. Obviously we have a tremendous lineup here, we have Faisal Alibrahim, he’s the Minister for Economy and Planning in Saudi Arabia, Larry Fink is the CEO and founder of Blackrock, Christine Lagarde is the President of the ECB, we have Kristalina Gorgieva who is the head of the IMF and we have the President of Singapore, President Tharman Shanmugaratnam. Thank you all for joining us.

U.S. Economic Optimism

You know, this Davos has been very interesting, Larry there’s so much optimism around President Trump and pro-growth policies and the U.S. outlook, I sort of wonder as an asset manager and a risk manager, like should we take the other side? Are you worried that everyone’s too excited right now?

Larry, you got me? It’s hard to hear. Oh, it’s hard to hear. This is why we are putting those things. Oh, okay. I was just asking you if there’s too much optimism around the U.S. outlook right now and whether that was worrisome.

LAURENCE D. FINK: Well welcome everybody, thank you Sara, now I can hear you. Is there too much optimism in the U.S.? No. That being said, there’s risk in every economy. I can say much more forcibly, there’s too much pessimism in Europe. For somebody who’s been pessimistic in Europe for like 10 years, if I had my number one observation this week in Davos, the pessimism, I’ve never felt, you know, the pessimism would be larger and more profound. And I believe it’s probably time to be investing back into Europe, focusing on it.

I mean I see all the problems in Europe, but I do believe the pessimism is too large. There’s many things it needs to do, it needs a banking union and a capital markets union, which we’re going to talk about later on. But back to the United States, I think all the ingredients for the United States is it will be the continuation of its strength.

The foundation of its capital markets, any entrepreneur, any small company, any large company can find capital. And that foundation of capital raising allows much more entrepreneurialism, much more creativity. And so I believe the U.S. has the ability, because of its strength of its capital markets, which is solely really underappreciated, allows it to rebuild itself, change directions, modify faster than any economy in the world. And I do believe the economy obviously changes depending on the political party and the president, but the reality is the economy is larger than any one political party or any one president.

Obviously they could be additive to any economy and, you know, President Trump’s policies, if we’re able to unlock private capital and put private capital to work faster, easier, with less regulation, less time for permitting, it’ll allow the U.S. to become less dependent on its own fiscal problems. And so those are some of the issues that could be worked out. So no, there’s not too much optimism in the U.S., and there’s probably more to be optimistic here in Europe.

Europe’s Potential

SARA EISEN: President Lagarde, I bet you didn’t expect to kick off the panel with a vote of confidence for Europe, because what we’ve been hearing here a lot is Europe’s economy is underperforming, the Trump factor is going to be bad for Europe. How have you digested all of this?

CHRISTINE LAGARDE: Well, good morning to everyone. But I was going to say to Larry that if ever you look for a pro bono job, come and join us in Europe, because you advocate Europe in a beautiful way.

So given where I am, the fact that I’m in my quiet period before a Monetary Policy Week decision coming up soon, I would just like to underscore what Europe is good at. And if I look at the scorecard at the moment, whether you look at debt to GDP, about 80 percent, overall deficit for the euro area, about 3 percent, inflation, latest reading 2.4, and strong confidence that it’s going down rather than up, interest rates, 3 percent, huge amount of talent, huge amount of savings, and a big wake-up call that is really calling the Europeans to action.

So if the European leaders can actually get their act together, respond to this wake-up call and existential threat that can be identified, then I think that there is a huge potential for Europe to respond to the call. So I’m also pretty optimistic. I’m realist about the points that Larry made. We need banking union, we need capital market union, we need to keep the talent at home, we need to keep the savings at home, and maybe it’s also time to import a few of the talents that would be disenchanted for one reason or the other from another side of the sea.

SARA EISEN: Just quickly, why do you call it an existential threat? Why is it existential right now? Why is it?

CHRISTINE LAGARDE: Well, because as Larry was suggesting, if you talk to the CEOs, if you talk to the corporate world at the moment, those that are making major investment decisions, they are not very upbeat right now. And when you ask them why they are not, they are making reference to the price of energy, fair enough, but energy costs are going down as the recycle, the non-fossil energy is going up in Europe in a significant way when you consider that electricity production in the Euro area at least is now 70% non-fossil originated.

They complain about the excessive red tape and the excessive bureaucracy.