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Thread: France and Germany technically no longer in recession

  1. #1

    France and Germany technically no longer in recession

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/8198766.stm

    The French and German economies both grew by 0.3% between April and June, bringing to an end year-long recessions in two of Europe's largest economies.

    "The data is very surprising. After four negative quarters France is coming out of the red," said French Finance and Economy Minister Christine Lagarde.

    Few analysts expected the economies to come out of recession this early.

    The eurozone's official gross domestic product (GDP) figures will be released later on Thursday morning.

    Both the French and German economies last grew in the first quarter of 2008.

    'State umbrella'

    The German economy, Europe's largest, contracted by a revised 3.5% in the first three months of the year.

    And while exports rose 7% in June, the fastest pace in nearly three years, few analysts had expected a return to overall economic growth so quickly.

    The country's Federal Statistics Office said that household and government expenditure had boosted growth.

    It added that imports had declined "far more sharply than exports, which had a positive effect on GDP growth".

    Analyst reaction to Germany's recovery was mixed.

    "The recession has ended, and it has ended sooner than we all thought. We expect to see growth of 1% in the third quarter, which is very strong for Germany, and I wouldn't rule out the chance of even better growth," said Andreas Rees at Unicredit.

    Others were more circumspect, arguing that the economy is over-reliant on government stimulus packages.

    "What we're seeing is the impact of fiscal policy. The question is how lasting [the recovery] will be. There are lots of problems we haven't solved. In particular, the banking sector is still reliant on the state umbrella," said Jens-Oliver Niklasch at LBBW.

    "As long as it's not clear that the bank's capital base is robust, we can't assume that the crisis is over."

    Consumer spending

    France's economy had contracted by a revised 1.1% in the first quarter.

    Ms Largarde said that consumer spending and strong exports had helped to pull France out of recession.

    "What we see is that consumption is holding up," she said.

    Official figures showed that household consumption rose by 0.4% in the second quarter.

    She said government incentive schemes for trading in old cars, together with falling prices, were helping consumers.

    Foreign trade contributed 0.9% to the GDP figure - a "very strong impact", said Ms Largarde.

    "[The figures are] a positive surprise, as many people were expecting slightly negative numbers," said Marie Diron at Oxford Economics.

    But she warned that growth is "still very fragile".

    "Investment is down, we still have surprisingly low stocking, and growth is boosted by the fact that imports fell sharply," she added.



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  3. #2
    Probably just a temporary spike that will soon disappear once the worst of our financial situation surfaces here in America.



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