Eurozone's economic woes deepen
PRIVATE business activity in the eurozone in February was not as bad as first feared but still showed the economic slump deepening, a key survey showed yesterday.
The Purchasing Managers' Composite Index published by Markit was a revised 47.9 in February, up from the initial reading of 47.3 but down from 48.6 in January and away from the boom-bust line of 50.
The reading "signalled a steepening of the downturn in business activity, contrasting with the easing trend which had been evident in the three months to January," London-based Markit said.
At the same time, the data showed a rate of decline that was "less severe than seen in any of the nine months prior to January," it said.
Chris Williamson, Markit's chief economist, said the outcome was "a disappointment" but the figures suggested the eurozone economy would shed 0.2 percent in the first quarter, better than a 0.6-percent drop seen in the three months to December.
Williamson noted with concern the "divergence between Germany and France so far this year is the widest in the 15-year survey history.
"Germany is on course to see the strongest quarterly growth since (early) 2011 but France is contracting at the fastest rate for four years," he said.
The PMI for Germany came in at 53.3 while France was on 43.1 in February.
Williamson noted the rate of decline accelerated in Spain and in Italy, where inconclusive recent elections may prove negative for growth.
"The outlook seems to depend on whether Germany can continue to expand and offset the weakness in France, Italy and Spain," he said.
The Purchasing Managers' Composite Index published by Markit was a revised 47.9 in February, up from the initial reading of 47.3 but down from 48.6 in January and away from the boom-bust line of 50.
The reading "signalled a steepening of the downturn in business activity, contrasting with the easing trend which had been evident in the three months to January," London-based Markit said.
At the same time, the data showed a rate of decline that was "less severe than seen in any of the nine months prior to January," it said.
Chris Williamson, Markit's chief economist, said the outcome was "a disappointment" but the figures suggested the eurozone economy would shed 0.2 percent in the first quarter, better than a 0.6-percent drop seen in the three months to December.
Williamson noted with concern the "divergence between Germany and France so far this year is the widest in the 15-year survey history.
"Germany is on course to see the strongest quarterly growth since (early) 2011 but France is contracting at the fastest rate for four years," he said.
The PMI for Germany came in at 53.3 while France was on 43.1 in February.
Williamson noted the rate of decline accelerated in Spain and in Italy, where inconclusive recent elections may prove negative for growth.
"The outlook seems to depend on whether Germany can continue to expand and offset the weakness in France, Italy and Spain," he said.
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