Morrow County Sentinel.com

Eurozone slides back into recession

LONDON (AP) — 11.15.12 — The 17-country euro­zone has fallen back into reces­sion for the first time in three years as the fall­out from the region’s finan­cial cri­sis was felt from Ams­ter­dam to Athens.

And with sur­veys point­ing to increas­ingly depressed con­di­tions across the 17-member group at a time of aus­ter­ity and high unem­ploy­ment, the reces­sion is fore­cast to deepen, and make the debt cri­sis — which has been calmer of late — even more dif­fi­cult to handle.

Offi­cial fig­ures Thurs­day showed that the euro­zone con­tracted by 0.1 per­cent in the July to Sep­tem­ber period from the quar­ter before as economies includ­ing Ger­many and the Nether­lands suf­fer from falling demand.

The decline reported by Euro­stat, the EU’s sta­tis­tics office, was in line with mar­ket expec­ta­tions and fol­lows on from the 0.2 per­cent fall recorded in the sec­ond quar­ter. As a result, the euro­zone is tech­ni­cally in reces­sion, com­monly defined as two straight quar­ters of falling output.

The euro­zone econ­omy shrank at annual rate of 0.2 per­cent dur­ing the July-September quar­ter, accord­ing to cal­cu­la­tions by Cap­i­tal Economics.

The euro­zone econ­omy will con­tinue its decline in Q4 and prob­a­bly well into 2013 too — a good back­drop for another debt cri­sis,” said Michael Tay­lor, an econ­o­mist at Lom­bard Street Research.

Because of the eurozone’s gru­el­ing three-year debt cri­sis, the region has been the major focus of con­cern for the world econ­omy. The euro­zone econ­omy is worth around (EURO)9.5 tril­lion, or $12.1 tril­lion, which puts it on a par with the U.S.. The region, with its 332 mil­lion peo­ple, is the U.S.‘s largest export cus­tomer, and any fall-off in demand will hit order books.

While the U.S has man­aged to bounce back from its own reces­sion in 2008-09, albeit incon­sis­tently, and China con­tin­ues to post strong growth, Europe’s economies have been on a down­ward spi­ral — and there is lit­tle sign of any improve­ment in the near-term. Last week, the Euro­pean Union’s exec­u­tive arm fore­cast the eurozone’s econ­omy would shrink 0.4 per­cent this year. Then only a mea­ger 0.1 per­cent growth in 2013.

The euro­zone had avoided return­ing to reces­sion since the finan­cial cri­sis fol­low­ing the col­lapse of U.S. invest­ment bank Lehman Broth­ers, mainly thanks to the strength of its largest sin­gle econ­omy, Germany.

But even that coun­try is now strug­gling as exports drain in light of the eco­nomic prob­lems afflict­ing large chunks of the eurozone.

Germany’s econ­omy grew 0.2 per­cent in the third quar­ter, down from a 0.3 per­cent increase in the pre­vi­ous quar­ter. Over the past year, Germany’s annual growth rate has more than halved to 0.9 per­cent from 1.9 percent.

Germany’s Chan­cel­lor, Angela Merkel, tried to strike a pos­i­tive note when she spoke to reporters in Berlin Thursday.

I think we all are work­ing on get­ting back on our feet again rapidly,” she said.

We see that eco­nomic growth is slow­ing, that over­all we have a small drop in the euro­zone but I’m also very opti­mistic that if we do our polit­i­cal home­work … we will again have growth after this small decline.”

Per­haps the most dra­matic decline among the eurozone’s mem­bers was seen in the Nether­lands, which has imposed strict aus­ter­ity mea­sures. Its econ­omy shrank 1.1 per­cent on the pre­vi­ous quarter.

Five euro­zone coun­tries are in reces­sion — Greece, Spain, Italy, Por­tu­gal and Cyprus. Those five are also at the cen­ter of Europe’s debt cri­sis and are impos­ing aus­ter­ity mea­sures, such as cuts to wages and pen­sions and increases to taxes, in an attempt to stay afloat.

As well as hit­ting work­ers’ incomes and liv­ing stan­dards, these mea­sures have also led to a decline in eco­nomic out­put and a sharp increase in unemployment.

Spain and Greece have unem­ploy­ment rates of over 25 per­cent. Their young peo­ple are far­ing even worse with every other per­son out of work. As well as being a cost to gov­ern­ments who have to pay out more for ben­e­fits, it car­ries a huge social and human cost.

Protests across Europe on Wednes­day high­lighted the scale of dis­con­tent and with eco­nomic sur­veys point­ing to the down­turn get­ting worse, the voices of anger may well get louder still.

The like­li­hood is that this anger will con­tinue to grow unless Euro­pean lead­ers and pol­i­cy­mak­ers start to act as if they have a clue as to how to resolve the cri­sis start­ing to unravel before their eyes,” said Michael Hew­son, mar­kets ana­lyst at CMC Markets.

Europe has no doubt made some progress this year in allay­ing some of the worst fears in the mar­kets, notably through the announce­ment of new bond-buying pro­gram from the Euro­pean Cen­tral Bank. How­ever, with Greece still tee­ter­ing on the edge and the euro­zone in reces­sion, the eco­nomic storms are never far away.

Mario Draghi, the ECB’s pres­i­dent has been widely cred­ited for help­ing fos­ter the more opti­mistic tone in the mar­kets but he admits there’s still a long way to go.

The year that is about to end will be remem­bered not only for the effects the Euro­pean sov­er­eign debt cri­sis has had on the euro and for the sig­nif­i­cant weak­en­ing of the Euro­pean econ­omy, but also for the responses to these chal­lenges by the ECB, national gov­ern­ments and the Euro­pean Union,” he said in a speech at Uni­verisita Boc­coni in Milan.

Ulti­mately, it is up to gov­ern­ments to dis­pel once and for all the per­sis­tent uncer­tain­ties that mar­kets per­ceive and cit­i­zens fear,” Draghi added.

The wider 27-nation EU, which includes non-euro coun­tries, avoided the same reces­sion fate as the euro­zone. Euro­stat said the EU’s out­put rose 0.1 per­cent dur­ing the third quar­ter, largely on the back of an Olympics-related boost in Britain.

The EU’s out­put as a whole is greater than the U.S. It is also a major source of sales for the world’s lead­ing com­pa­nies. Forty per­cent of McDonald’s global rev­enue comes from Europe — more than it gen­er­ates in the U.S. Gen­eral Motors, mean­while, sold 1.7 mil­lion vehi­cles in Europe last year, a fifth of its world­wide sales.

Randa Wagner Posted by on Nov 15 2012. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS Feed. Both comments and pings are currently closed.

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