Daily Nation Newspaper

Eurozone suffers double-dip recession as pandemic impact continues

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LONDON - The eurozone’s economy has fallen back into recession as the impact of the pandemic continues to hit activity.

Europe’s economies have been set back by a renewed surge in infections this year and Covid- related restrictio­ns.

The eurozone shrank by 0.6 percent in the January-to-March period - the second consecutiv­e contractio­n, which is a widely- used definition of a recession.

It is the second such episode, a so-called double-dip recession, since the onset of the pandemic. However, among the national economies that have reported data so far, that pattern was repeated only by Italy.

Other countries reported some growth in one or other of the last two quarters.

The French economy did grow in the first three months of this year, by 0.4 percent, after a decline at the end of 2020, although the rebound was described by the national statistica­l agency as “limited.”

In Germany it was the other way around, with some growth in the fourth quarter of last year and a sharp decline - of 1.7 percent - revealed by the latest figures. The bigger picture is a region where economic activity has been set back once again by the spread of the virus and restrictio­ns imposed to curb it.

The figures are particular­ly bleak in the case of Italy, where the economy is still 6.6 percent smaller than at the end of 2019, before the pandemic.

That said, the economic damage in this phase of the health crisis is less severe. Economic activity in the eurozone in the most recent period was 11 percent higher than at the nadir in the second quarter of last year.

Looking ahead, this weak performanc­e is expected to improve as vaccinatio­n programmes allow further easing of restrictio­ns and support consumer confidence. That will be especially important in southern Europe where many businesses need to see a recovery in tourism.

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