Analysis: Do recent economic data point to recovery in EU members?

Published Aug 27, 2012

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Roddy Thomson Brussels

Is the euro zone locked into a prolonged recession set to run right through next year? Or do the latest economic data actually indicate that the crisis-hit currency area is turning a corner?

With at least an outside chance that the region’s jobless rate could cross the threshold of 18 million when up-to-date unemployment figures are issued next week, it might seem like an odd time for analysts to pose that question.

Like the euro zone’s political leaders, analysts are to an extent divided, but keenly-watched growth statistics or indicators are increasingly being interpreted as evidence that austerity pain is starting to deliver long-term gain.

Late August has seen the EU announce that euro zone growth slipped back into reverse over the second quarter of the year, with a 0.2 percent contraction, but that the currency area also logged a record trade surplus of e14.9 billion (R156.5bn) and bumper cash earnings from exports of e12.7bn in the latest figures for June.

Subsequent commercial surveys of private business activity also gave mixed signals, with a seventh monthly decline in a row this month marked by the rate of contraction gaining pace in Germany, while easing in France.

Rob Dobson of research firm Markit said the latest snapshot from its regular purchasing managers’ index (PMI) implied that the euro zone was facing a 0.5 percent to 0.6 percent contraction in gross domestic product (GDP) for the third quarter.

That would meet the widely accepted definition of a recession – two successive quarters of economic contraction – and Dobson warned that “it would take a substantial bounce in September to change this outlook”.

He said Germany’s “export engine has slammed into reverse gear”, despite what Julian Callow of Barclays called a “significant depreciation” in the euro’s effective exchange rate, an annualised 8 percent when measured against a trade-weighted index.

Slowing Chinese imports hold the key on that front despite sharply improved export performance over the past year for weaker Mediterranean economies, and Julien Manceaux of ING Bank said the PMI data “confirms that the decline in euro zone GDP in the second quarter is likely to be the first leg of a technical recession”.

More and more of these number-crunchers, though, say a way through the crisis maze is opening up.

Christian Schulz of Germany’s Berenberg Bank said the data pattern confirmed that “by tackling internal imbalances through structural reforms and front-loaded austerity, the EU countries are becoming competitive on the global stage.”

“Exports are the ultimate yardstick,” he said, and while “the weaker euro and lower commodity prices” boosted performance, he stressed “additional reasons for the success: austerity, unemployment and deleveraging have reduced demand for imports in many crisis countries.”

Schulz argued that improved economic growth figures in the US and Japan stemmed from their relying, like Britain, “on their central banks to stimulate the economy and postpone painful adjustments”.

Colleague Holger Schmieding has gone further, stating that under the sort of “tough love” advocated by the European Central Bank, “we may be witnessing the birth pains of a stronger, more coherent and more dynamic economic and political entity in Europe”.

Marie Diron of Ernst & Young Eurozone Forecast said that the PMI data “supports our view that, while probably shrinking further, the euro zone economy is not falling off a cliff”.

She highlighted better results in the region’s manufacturing sector.

Ratings giant Moody’s Investor Services, which led the downgrading of ever-bigger euro zone countries since Greek public debt discrepancies first surfaced in late 2009, said there had been ”significant progress” around euro zone governments.

“However, the correction is at best only half-way complete,” its economists cautioned, urging unwavering discipline in the “unwinding” of “accumulated vulnerabilities” it blamed not on governments, but on “private sector overspending, which was itself financed by core countries’ capital flows”.

If Greece does leave the euro zone some time next year, as tipped by the likes of IHS Global Insight and Capital Economics, that too will be seen by these harder-line observers as the euro zone getting leaner and fitter for challenges ahead.

Even in non-euro Britain, influential commentators are pressuring the Conservative-led UK government in London to follow Germany’s lead.

Finance Minister “George Osborne is studying what Germany got right”, a key Daily Telegraph columnist wrote on Friday, highlighting “mini-jobs contracts that allow a worker to earn e400 a month tax-free on the condition that they can be sacked at any moment”.

The newspaper predicted short-term pain if Osborne voluntarily took the same medicine prescribed to the EU periphery, but also general election victory in 2015. – Sapa-AFP

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