EU economy hit hard by global downturn

Published: 20 January 2009 y., Tuesday

Kritimas
The Commission estimates that economic growth fell to about 1% in 2008 in both the EU and the eurozone (down from just below 3% in 2007). The latest forecast projects that real GDP will contract by almost 2% in both regions in 2009, before growing again by about 0.5% in 2010. These figures are lower than the autumn forecast.

With the EU economy expected to shed some 3.5m jobs this year, unemployment is set to rise. The rate is forecast to reach 8¾% in the EU in 2009 (9¼% in the eurozone), with a further increase in 2010.

Public finances will be hit, too. The headline deficit for EU countries – a raw measure of budget shortfalls – is expected to more than double this year, from 2% of GDP in 2008 to 4½ % in 2009 (from 1¾ % to 4% in the eurozone). As a result, several EU countries are projected to breach or stay over the EU deficit cap of 3% of GDP. A further worsening of the budgetary outlook is expected for 2010.

On the positive side, inflationary pressures are abating rapidly amid faltering commodity prices. Consumer-price inflation is now expected to fall – from 3.7% in 2008 in the EU (3.3% in the eurozone) to about 1% in 2009 and just below 2% in 2010 (both EU and eurozone).

The Commission usually publishes economic forecasts four times a year – comprehensive spring and autumn forecasts and smaller interim forecasts in February and September. But in light of the sharp economic slowdown, the current interim forecast has been expanded. Covering all EU countries, it includes more variables than usual and the full two-year forecast horizon. The next full-fledged forecast will come out on 4 May 2009.

 

Šaltinis: ec.europa.eu
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Hungary Makes Another Effort to Sell Malev

Hungarian Government Makes Another Effort to Sell Its Troubled Malev Airlines more »

Uzbekistan expects 7% GDP growth in 2005

Uzbekistan plans to achieve growth of gross domestic product by 7% in 2005 more »

Latvia’s Parex Asset Management opens subsidiary in Ukraine

Parex Assets Management (PAM), an asset management company owned by Parex Bank, has established a subsidiary in Ukraine, Parex Asset Management Ukraine, to launch the fund management operations there by the end of the year more »

Banking Rate In Armenia Remains Unchanged - 16% Annually

Since September 1 the banking rate in Armenia remains unchanged at 16% annually more »

Exchange deals

Armenian Dram Increases By 0.10% Against U.S. Dollar In August more »

DEVELOPMENT OF ENTREPRENEURSHIP

Over 53,000 private entrepreneurs with a license and a registration number and over 14,000 enterprises, making up 79% of the total number of registered legal entities in the country, were registered in the private sector of the economy in 2003 more »

The Highway

The first highway that will answer the international standards, is being constructed in the Western Kazakhstan more »

Little Sign of New Jobs Created in Europe

The euro zone continues to experience a jobless recovery, with no indication that new jobs are being created after more than a year of generally sluggish economic growth more »

INCREASED FUEL&LUBIRICANTS TRANSIT TARIFFS

Russia's enclave on the Baltic sea, the Kaliningrad region will sustain losses from Lithuania upping prices on railway transit of fuel and lubricants along its territory more »

Rabobank and EBRD poised to take major stake in BGŻ

Leading Dutch bank Rabobank will likely become a strategic investor in state-owned BGŻ, a bank servicing mainly the agriculture sector more »