Wednesday, May 23 2012

Intermittent Clouds Dublin Hi 20 °C | Lo 8°C

World News

Modest eurozone recession predicted

European Commissioner Olli Rehn says the eurozone economy will suffer a modest recession (AP)

European Commissioner Olli Rehn says the eurozone economy will suffer a modest recession (AP)

Thursday February 23 2012

The 17-nation eurozone economy will suffer a modest recession this year despite recent signs of stabilisation, particularly in financial markets, the European Union's executive branch has said.

In its latest projections, the European Commission forecast a 0.3% contraction in the eurozone economy, with Greece leading the way downwards with a massive 4.4% decline. That would be the fifth straight year of recession in Greece, which earlier this week clinched its second massive bailout package in less than two years.

In its last forecast in November, the Commission predicted a 0.5% expansion across the eurozone economy following last year's 1.4% growth. The difference this time is that it now expects the economies of Belgium, Spain, Italy, Cyprus, the Netherlands and Slovenia to contract in 2012, not just Greece and Portugal.

The overall decline is limited by resilient activity in Germany and France, the eurozone's two largest economies. Growth in Germany is expected to be 0.6% while France is forecast to grow by 0.4%.

"Although growth has stalled, we are seeing signs of stabilisation in the European economy," said Olli Rehn, European Commissioner for Economic and Monetary Affairs. "Economic sentiment is still at low levels, but stress in financial markets is easing."

He said the forecast was based on the assumption that uncertainty created by the debt crisis "will gradually fade away".

Last November, financial markets were struck by fears that Europe's debt crisis would not be confined to the relatively small economies of Greece, Ireland and Portugal. Worries grew that Spain and Italy could get swamped by their debt loads, too. Both countries now have new governments to enact sweeping austerity measures.

The more benign atmosphere in financial markets has also been helped by the European Central Bank's offering of super-cheap long-term loans to banks and the decision of the 17 euro countries to tie their economies closer together.

Though austerity measures are the main pillar in Europe's strategy to fight the debt crisis, they are clearly hurting the economy in the short term - Spain and Italy are expected to sink into recession this year as their governments cut debt aggressively.

The wider 27-nation EU, which includes non-euro countries, is expected to post flat growth this year. Britain is forecast to grow 0.6%, while Poland is expected to post a 2.5% expansion, the highest rate across the EU.

Press Association

 
 

Video Highlights

(video)

Men 'seen leaving hotel murder room'

An eyewitness saw the two men accused of murdering Michaela McAreavey emerge from her hotel room moments after he heard cries of anguish coming from inside, a court in Mauritius hears.

(video)

Pitt fever grips Cannes

Crowds went wild tonight as they caught a glimpse of Hollywood superstar Brad Pitt as he arrived at the premiere of his new film.Pitt, looking dapper in a black tuxedo and a pair of sunglasses, with his blond hair loose around his shoulders, sent fans into raptures as he paced quickly up and down the lines of fans bordering the pavement in Cannes, signing autographs.Angelina Jolie, Pitt's long-term partner with whom he has six children, was not on the red carpet with him at the festival in the French Riviera resort because of prior commitments.

(video)

IMF calls for Plan B on economy

The IMF said that further easing of monetary policy, by printing money or even cutting the 0.5% base interest rate, was "required" now to inject some vigour into a flat economy. And it said the Government should consider an immediate increase in spending on infrastructure to boost growth and employment.

View more



Most Popular

View more most popular

Highlights

Independentwoman.ie

Independent Woman

A fresh, fun site featuring celeb gossip, fashion, beauty, love & sex, and health & fitness.

Findajob.ie

Job search

Search for jobs by keyword, category, or location.

College

Third Level College

Diploma, Degree, Postgraduate and Professional Courses

Yourlocal.ie

Directory

Wherever you are... Find what you're looking for on Yourlocal.ie.

GrabOne

GrabOne

Daily Deals: Find the best things to do, see and eat in Ireland