Picture
The outlook for the world’s developed economies is the  bleakest since the oil shock of the early 1970s, an indicator of future activity  released by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development showed  Friday.
 Adding to the gloom, the OECD’s leading indicator data  suggest that the large developing economies are increasingly being dragged down  by the recession in richer nations.
 The OECD’s leading indicator for its 30  developed-country members fell again in December, as did the individual  indicators for each of the Group of Seven leading industrial nations. The  leading indicators for non-members China, India, Russia and Brazil also fell  sharply.
 “Leading indicators…continue to point to a weakening  outlook for all the major seven economies,” The OECD said. “The outlook has  significantly deteriorated in the major non-OECD member economies who are now  also facing strong slowdowns.”
 Important parts of some G-7 economies are already  experiencing slowdowns on a scale last seen in the early to mid 1970s, when a  surge in oil prices and a shortage of energy led to severe cutbacks in  industrial production.