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

The Deal

Retail giant PKO BP gets go ahead for Bank Pocztowy deal more »

Vodafone rings the changes for Czech bid

Europe’s largest mobile phone operator, has shunned its traditional advisers on mergers and acquisitions more »

The central bank's decision

The Hungarian central bank cut its benchmark interest rate by 0.50 percentage points to 11.0 percent in what was seen as an attempt to weaken the country's currency more »

LNM Holdings buys majority stake in Bosnia's biggest steelworks

The world's second-largest steel producer, LNM Holdings, bought a 51-percent stake in Bosnia's biggest steelworks, BH Steel, for 80 million dollars more »

European markets halt their slide

European stock markets slid on Friday amid profit taking in the oil sector but managed to end off their lows as Wall Street rebounded from Thursday's sell-off more »

Fiorina Takes Quick Action To Right HP

Hewlett-Packard announced the firing of three top executives after reporting a dismal quarter and acknowledging that the company's failure to execute on its own internal computing initiatives left it vulnerable to competitors more »

The flow of orders from NATO countries

Lithuanian companies making military clothes overflowed with orders from NATO countries more »

A credit rating

Standard & Poor's, a rating firm, has assigned an A credit rating to PZU, the state-controlled insurance giant more »

The June deficit

The Czech Republic's current account deficit came in at a higher than expected $403 million, official figures showed Wednesday. more »

SkyEurope prepares to take off from Kraków

SkyEurope, the Slovak budget carrier, will start to offer flights from Kraków airport in September more »