Arab Times

ECB sees a few upbeat signs in eurozone

Economic growth remains weak: officials

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FRANKFURT, Germany, Jan 16, (AP): Top officials at the European Central Bank say economic growth remains weak though they see a few upbeat signs after the U.S and China moved toward lowering trade tensions.

Recent data point to “a stabilizat­ion in euro area growth,” according to an account of the Dec 12 policy meeting released Thursday. It was the first policy meeting under new ECB head Christine Lagarde, who succeeded Mario Draghi on Nov 1.

But members of the 25-person governing council still see “continued weak euro area growth dynamics.”

The big concerns remain developmen­ts outside the 19 countries that use the euro. The eurozone depends heavily on trade and manufactur­ers in the region have been hard hit by uncertaint­y over the outcome of US-China trade negotiatio­ns. The possibilit­y of new tariffs, or import taxes, has cast a shadow over investment plans and the fate of the intertwine­d supply chains in

A party boat on the river Main passes the European Central Bank in Frankfurt, Germany on Jan 15.The governing council of the ECB will

meet next week. (AP)

the global economy. The US and China signed a deal resolving some issues on Wednesday but global tensions over trade remain largely unresolved.

The ECB foresees modest growth of 1.1% for the eurozone this year. Service companies and constructi­on activities have helped support growth while manufactur­ing of goods such as autos and industrial machinery remains in a recession.

Carsten Brzeski, chief economist at ING Germany, said the minutes reflected the subtle improvemen­t in the outlook expressed by Lagarde at her first news conference the day of the meeting.

“In general, the ECB is sticking to its view of a moderate recovery later on, while the growth outlook remains muted in the near term,” Brzeski said.

Lagarde has left untouched stimulus efforts put in place under Draghi. Those include a 0.5% negative interest rate on some deposits left at the ECB by commercial banks, a penalty that aims to push the banks to lend and support business activity. The ECB is also buying 20 billion euros ($22 billion) per month in government and corporate bonds, a step that pumps newly printed money into the financial system.

Lagarde has instead focused on leading a detailed review of how the bank sets monetary policy.

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