Image via WikipediaContagion could fracture the eurozone: "The week's events have challenged the smug notion that the credit crunch is a purely Anglo-Saxon affair. A glance around Europe shows this is far from the truth: from Iceland to Greece, there are signs of acute stress accentuated by the same marked slowdown as in the UK.
France's quarterly growth rate slowed from 0.7% in the third quarter of last year to 0.4% in each of the next two quarters, then went negative by 0.3% in quarter two of this year. Christine Lagarde, finance minister, expects GDP to contract again in the third quarter. This is technically a recession: two consecutive quarters of falling output.
Italy has performed even less well. GDP fell in both the fourth quarter of 2007 and the second quarter of this year, dragging the already anaemic annual growth rate down to zero. In France it is 1.1% and in Britain 1.4%. Germany has been the best performing of Europe's big four economies, but it too is slowing as demand for its exports is affected by the global slowdown. Germany's output fell by 0.5% in the second quarter, pulling its annual growth rate down to 1.7%.
By comparison, annual growth in the US is 2.2%, although the strong performance in the second quarter was due to a one-off $150bn (£85bn) tax cut, and the economy now appears to be slowing fast."
Sunday, October 5, 2008
Europe Cannot Escape
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