Daily Observer (Jamaica)

EU cuts forecast for economic growth as war’s fallout widens

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BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) — The European Union has slashed its forecasts for economic growth in the 27nation bloc amid the prospect of a drawn-out Russian war in Ukraine and disruption­s to energy supplies.

The EU’S gross domestic product will expand 2.7 per cent this year and 2.3 per cent in 2023, the bloc’s executive arm said Monday — its first economic prediction­s since Russia invaded Ukraine on February 24.

The European Commission’s previous outlook expected growth of 4 per cent this year and 2.8 per cent in 2023. The EU economy expanded 5.4 per cent last year following a deep recession prompted by the novel coronaviru­s pandemic. Gross domestic product (GDP) shrank 5.9 per cent in 2020.

“Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has posed new challenges, just as the union had recovered from the economic impacts of the pandemic,” the commission said when releasing the forecast. “The war is exacerbati­ng pre-existing headwinds to growth.”

The war has darkened what was generally a bright economic picture for the EU. Early this year, European policymake­rs were counting on solid, if weaker, growth while grappling with surging inflation triggered by a global energy squeeze.

Now, energy has become a key problem for the EU as it seeks sanctions that deny Russia tens of billions in trade revenue without plunging member countries into recession. Soaring energy prices are driving record inflation, making everything from food to transport and housing more expensive.

Russia is the EU’S top supplier of oil, natural gas and coal, accounting for around a quarter of the bloc’s total energy. EU imports of energy from Russia last year totalled 99 billion euros ($103 billion), or 62 per cent of the bloc’s purchases of Russian goods.

An EU ban on coal from Russia is due to start in August, and a voluntary effort is underway to reduce demand for Russian natural gas by twothirds this year. A proposed oil embargo has hit roadblocks amid reservatio­ns from some landlocked countries that are highly dependent on Russian oil, such as Hungary.

All of this has left the EU scrambling to secure alternativ­e supplies of energy in the coming months, including from fossil-fuel exporting countries such as the United States and from domestic renewable sources meant to help the bloc achieve its longer-term climate goals. “Russia’s invasion of Ukraine is leading to an economic decoupling of the EU from Russia, with consequenc­es that are difficult to fully apprehend at this stage,” the European Commission

said.

The latest forecast also paints a gloomier inflation picture as a result of the increases in energy prices. Eu-wide inflation is now expected to be 6.8 per cent this year and 3.2 per cent in 2023 — well above the previous projection­s of 3.9 per cent and 1.9 per cent, respective­ly.

European Economy Commission­er Paolo Gentiloni warned that even the new economic outlook could be too optimistic in view of the war.

“Our forecast is subject to very high uncertaint­y and risks,” Gentiloni said. “Other scenarios are possible under which growth may be lower and inflation higher than we are projecting.”

In the months before the invasion, a worldwide energy crunch had driven inflation in Europe to record highs. That trend has accelerate­d during the conflict, with inflation in the 19 countries that share the euro currency hitting 7.5 per cent in April.

This has set the stage for the European Central Bank to possibly bring to an end to years of loose monetary policy in coming months — including record-low interest rates — meant to help fuel economic activity.

The bank, which has an inflation target of two per cent, has maintained its interest rates at zero or less and kept other market borrowing costs low by purchasing hundreds of billions of euros of assets in financial markets.

Bank officials have signalled a reversal in both policies starting as soon as this summer but are balancing how to target inflation without weighing on economic growth. The central banks of the US and the United Kingdom have raised interest rates this year to counter galloping inflation.

Gentiloni on Monday would not rule out the possibilit­y of the EU falling into stagflatio­n — the combinatio­n of a stagnant economy and rising inflation — while saying such a risk remained remote.

“This is possible if the negative scenario materialis­es, but this is not our base forecast,” Gentiloni said. “But indeed, we have very high inflation and quite low growth.”

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 ?? ?? In this AP file photo a car stops in a gas station where prices are up to 2,75 euros per liter (US $3.04) in Marseille, southern France, Wednesday, March 9, 2022. The European Union slashed its forecasts of economic growth in the 27-nation bloc amid the prospect of a drawn-out Russian war in Ukraine and disruption­s to EU energy trade.
In this AP file photo a car stops in a gas station where prices are up to 2,75 euros per liter (US $3.04) in Marseille, southern France, Wednesday, March 9, 2022. The European Union slashed its forecasts of economic growth in the 27-nation bloc amid the prospect of a drawn-out Russian war in Ukraine and disruption­s to EU energy trade.
 ?? ?? Pipes at the landfall facilities of the ‘Nord Stream 2’ gas pipline are pictured in Lubmin, northern Germany, on February 15, 2022. EU imports of energy from Russia last year totalled 99 billion euros (US$103 billion), or 62 per cent of the bloc’s purchases of Russian goods. Russia is the top supplier to the EU of oil, natural gas and coal, accounting for around a quarter of the bloc’s total energy.
Pipes at the landfall facilities of the ‘Nord Stream 2’ gas pipline are pictured in Lubmin, northern Germany, on February 15, 2022. EU imports of energy from Russia last year totalled 99 billion euros (US$103 billion), or 62 per cent of the bloc’s purchases of Russian goods. Russia is the top supplier to the EU of oil, natural gas and coal, accounting for around a quarter of the bloc’s total energy.

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