Global GDP growth is set to remain subdued
Non-OECD import volume growth collapsed in 2015
Financial conditions in major advanced economies have become less supportive
GDP growth projections for the major economies
Labour market outcomes are improving slowly
Weak investment and productivity growth have hit potential output growth
Capital stock growth and the investment rate will pick up from low levels
Investment growth is expected to strengthen in the euro area and the United States
The composition of total investment growth in advanced countries will continue to differ
Contributions to the annual growth of OECD and non-OECD import volumes
China is on-shoring its value chain
Stronger trade growth would help to boost productivity
Broad measures of labour market slack remain elevated
Participation rates have risen but labour force growth has slowed in several countries
The relationship between wage growth and unemployment has changed in some countries
Energy prices have pulled down inflation across the OECD
The unemployment gap has recently contributed little to price inflation
The impact of financial shocks on real GDP by 2018
Credit has increased substantially in some large EMEs
EME's external vulnerabilities have increased due to exchange rate depreciations
Real short and long-term interest rates have been low or negative
The slope of the yield curve has declined
Some central banks have become dominant holders of domestic government bonds
Markets have become pessimistic about the outlook for banks
Fiscal stances in OECD countries
Long-term effect of a sustained increase in public investment by 0.5% of GDP
The global recovery will gain momentum only slowly
OECD labour market conditions will improve slowly
World trade growth remains very weak
Interest rates have become negative across different maturities
Characteristics of negative interest rate frameworks
Indicators of potential financial vulnerabilities
Financial-accounts-related risk factors to financial stability