China Daily (Hong Kong)

Tentative pickup seen in European economies

- By JULIAN SHEA in London julian@mail.chinadaily­uk.com

Countries across Europe are making a gradual return to economic activity as novel coronaviru­s measures are relaxed, data has revealed, but a full-scale return to business still looks distant.

Italy and Spain, two of the worst affected countries, and also Germany have been among the first to ease the rules and allow some commercial premises and workplaces to reopen, and France will begin the process early in May.

Although figures for consumptio­n are not yet available, indicators such as travel data and energy consumptio­n show that there are definite changes in behavior.

“There are some tentative signs of improvemen­t in economic activity in the high-frequency data such as increased electricit­y consumptio­n in Italy and Spain and slightly less depressed footfall in German cities over the past week,” Jessica Hinds, Europe economist at Capital Economics, told The Financial Times.

Germany’s office of statistics recorded a slight increase in the number of journeys made on the country’s highways by large trucks, an indication of renewed activity.

“Germany has now moved to be one of the least restrictiv­e large economies in the eurozone,” said Felix Huefner, an economist at UBS.

But the picture is far from being entirely clear. Amid fears that infection levels may rise again, Lothar Wieler, head of Germany’s disease control agency, the Robert Koch Institute, urged that caution must still be exercised.

Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte was even more blunt in his advice. “If you love Italy, keep your distance,” he said. “If we do not respect the precaution­s the curve will go up, the deaths will increase, and we will have irreversib­le damage to our economy.”

Question marks remain over Europe’s longer-term recovery, and what the new normal will look like after the pandemic is over.

At the start of April, major economic surveys across Europe reported record levels of contractio­n, with figures far in excess of those seen during the crash of 2008.

Olivier Vigna, an economist at HSBC, said: “A key question is whether consumers will feel confident to spend once lockdown measures are relaxed.”

Even in the best-case scenario of there being no second spike in infections, it seems the process of getting back toward normality will be prolonged and economical­ly painful.

“It looks likely the process (of lifting restrictio­ns) will take months, which means that economic activity will likely remain below its precoronav­irus levels during the rest of the year,” said Angel Talavera from Oxford Economics.

 ?? YONHAP VIA REUTERS ?? Firefighte­rs and rescue workers check the condition of survivors rescued from an under-constructi­on warehouse after it caught fire in Icheon, South Korea, on Wednesday. At least 25 people were killed in the incident.
YONHAP VIA REUTERS Firefighte­rs and rescue workers check the condition of survivors rescued from an under-constructi­on warehouse after it caught fire in Icheon, South Korea, on Wednesday. At least 25 people were killed in the incident.

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