The story appears on

Page A10

August 1, 2018

GET this page in PDF

Free for subscribers

View shopping cart

Related News

Home » Business » Economy

Eurozone growth slows as trade tensions weigh

ECONOMIC growth in the eurozone slowed in the second quarter, official data showed yesterday, feeding concerns that global trade tensions fuelled by Washington may be hurting Europe’s economy.

Major economic institutions — including the European Central Bank and International Monetary Fund — have warned that growth in the eurozone risks taking a hit from the rising protectionism that stemmed from the “America First” policies of US President Donald Trump.

The fresh data confirmed the fears with growth in the 19-country single currency bloc hitting 0.3 percent in the April to June period, below the 0.4 percent in the previous quarter, the EU’s Eurostat statistics agency said.

On a year-on-year basis, economic growth in the eurozone reached 2.1 percent, which was far lower than the 2.5 percent in the previous quarter and also weaker than forecasts by analysts.

“Trade uncertainty seems to have already had a significant effect on the Eurozone economy in the second quarter,” said Bert Colijn, Senior Economist at ING bank.

“While the impact on real export growth has likely been small over the second quarter, the confidence factor has been more important,” he added.

European Central Bank chief Mario Draghi has already warned that “the threat of protectionism” remained a “prominent” risk to eurozone growth and warned that this year may not see a repeat of the bumper 2017.

IMF chief economist Maurice Obstfeld warned this month that “the risk that current trade tensions escalate further ... is the greatest near-term threat to global growth.”

The data landed days after the European Union and the US declared a trade war truce following White House talks, but analysts said the accord was fragile and that the spat could still weigh on growth.

Still, “the fact that the immediate risk of escalating trade tensions has diminished now should support growth throughout the second half of the year,” said Dirk Schumacher of Natixis bank.

The uncertainty over trade helped ECB governors last week decide to leave interest rates at historic lows even though they stuck to plans to halve “quantitative easing” or mass bond-buying from October before ending the stimulus scheme at the end of the year.

This came a month after the Italian banker surprised observers by announcing the ECB will wind down its massive stimulus program faster than anticipated, before ending altogether it in December.

“We still see growth regaining some pace as the year goes on, but for now the continued slowdown will certainly keep the ECB in cautious mode,” said Jennifer McKeown of Capital Economics.

The caution will be put to the test by the inflation data also released yesterday that saw the ECB’s 2 percent target exceeded.

Eurostat said eurozone inflation accelerated in July to 2.1 percent driven by high energy prices. This was slightly faster than forecast by analysts.




 

Copyright © 1999- Shanghai Daily. All rights reserved.Preferably viewed with Internet Explorer 8 or newer browsers.

沪公网安备 31010602000204号

Email this to your friend