Ian Kernohan, Royal London Asset Management 's economist, believes that we need to look beyond the double-dip debate to emerging markets.
Commenting he said: “I return from two weeks holiday to find that if economic and market sentiment was poor when I left, it is even worse now.
“For us, unless the next recession is of 2008/9 proportions, the "double-dip or no double-dip" question is an oversimplification of the main issue: at best, we are looking at a protracted period of modest growth in the developed world. The 2008/9 recession in advanced economies was not a quick 1980s or 1990s type downturn, which could easily be cured with policy easing, creating a new and vigorous cycle.
“The build-up of debt had gone on for some decades and each US expansion over the past 30 years has appeared weaker than the last, such that if the US does indeed enter recession within the next year, the latest expansion will have been so shallow to have scarcely been noticed.
“The major caveat to all this gloom is found in the emerging market space, which now accounts for the bulk of global growth.
“These economies have their own problems, but are dancing to a very different tune with respect to growth, inflation and policy options. In short, their inflationary problems look more like those faced by advanced economies in the 80s and 90s, and hence their policy options are less constrained.”