PDA

View Full Version : Germany can’t stave off euro-zone recession



Teh One Who Knocks
08-14-2012, 12:00 PM
William L. Watts - MarketWatch


FRANKFURT (MarketWatch) — Markets found something to cheer about after data Tuesday showed Germany managed to grow slightly more than expected in the second quarter while France avoided a downturn, but the figures won’t make easy beach reading for vacationing European policy makers.

“It shows just how dire things have become in the single currency area when the markets take comfort from figures that show the French and German economies are pretty much flat on their backs,” said Nicholas Spiro, managing director at Spiro Sovereign Strategy in London.

German gross domestic grew at a quarterly pace of 0.3% in the April-June period, outpacing forecasts for Europe’s largest economy to grow by 0.2%. France, the region’s No. 2 economy, posted a flat performance in the second quarter.

That wasn’t enough to keep overall euro-zone GDP from shrinking 0.2%, in line with forecasts, after a flat performance in the first three months of the year and a contraction in the final quarter of 2011. Without Germany, GDP would have shrunk at a 0.3% quarterly pace, according to Commerzbank.

Data so far indicate euro-zone GDP will continue to shrink in the current quarter. If so, that would meet the widely-used definition of a recession as two consecutive quarters of shrinking GDP.

The national numbers in the euro-zone periphery made for particularly grim reading. Spain (-0.4%), Italy (-0.7%), Cyprus (-0.8%) and Portugal (-1.2%) remain mired in recession. Belgium saw GDP shrink 0.6% after 1.2% quarterly growth in the first quarter.

And Greek gross domestic product saw a 6.2%, non-seasonally adjusted, year-on-year contraction in the second quarter, the country’s statistics agency reported. That implies a quarterly contraction of around 1% after a 0.5% rebound in the first quarter, according to Barclays.

Overall, the data point to a scenario that sees even the core economies shrinking over the remainder of 2012, economists said.

Meanwhile, the summer lull that’s made for thin trading and relatively calm markets will likely force policy makers, including European Central Bank President Mario Draghi, to come up with a plan to decisively bring down borrowing costs for otherwise too-big-to-bail Spain and Italy.

Berlin remains the linchpin

Pressure remains on peripheral countries to stick to a range of changes to labor rules and other painful measures aimed at boosting productivity. Germany, where Chancellor Angela Merkel has just returned from a vacation in South Tyrol, is likely to see renewed calls to use its fiscal breathing room to boost domestic demand.

It may also bolster Draghi in his battle with Germany’s Bundesbank as he works to build support for a plan that would see the ECB resume bond-buying in the secondary market if struggling countries tap the region’s rescue funds to buy bonds in the primary market.

Once again, euro-zone politics leave the summertime best sellers in the shade.

Arkady Renko
08-14-2012, 03:02 PM
and yet, I fail to see how flooding the markets with "cheap money" yet again will do anything to help. there is no silver bullet to end the debt crisis, and even though I'm not a trained economist, I can't buy the idea that our best way to fight a debt crisis is piling up more debt...I'm afraid politicians as well as people in the mediterranean countries will actually have to do some hard work if they want things to get better.