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The currency zone's largest economies will come to a standstill or shrink, it said in its latest economic outlook, with Germany, France and Italy not growing at all at 0.0 percent. Ireland and Spain will see output fall and jobless lines and government deficits swell, the EU executive said. Among EU members that do not use the euro, Britain's economy will slip into recession with minus 1 percent growth, while Baltic states Estonia and Latvia will also see negative growth. The 27-member EU warned that things may get even worse as forecasters could not rule out a deeper credit crunch that would brake the economy, strain government finances and put a near-freeze on household spending.
Even slightly higher costs for borrowing -- an extra risk premium of 0.5 percent on interest rates -- would tighten credit available to households and could "trigger an outright recession, a decline of 1 percent of GDP in the euro area," it said. The labor market should deteriorate sharply next year, it said, with unemployment in the euro-zone climbing to 8.4 percent in 2009 from a decade-low of 7 percent at the end of 2007. Spain will see the worst of this as a housing bubble bursts and tourism slows. The jobless rate may shoot up to 15.5 percent in 2010 from 10.8 percent this year, the EU says. EU economists said the outlook for the euro area and the wider 27-nation European Union "remains bleak" with growth contracting this winter before recovering gradually toward the end of next year as exports start to pick up.
It says the euro area likely shrank in the third quarter of 2008 and may grow 1.2 percent for the entire year, 0.1 percent next year and 0.9 percent in 2010. It forecast EU gross domestic product this year at 1.4 percent, falling to 0.2 percent in 2009 and 1.1 percent in 2010. The only silver lining it picks out is a slide in inflation, down from record highs to an average of 2.2 percent next year as oil prices cool swiftly. This may increase the amount of money people have to spend but they may be less likely to shop if they fear job losses. Private consumption is nearly stagnant, it says.
Oil prices should fall from a 2008 average of $104 a barrel to $86 next year, it says. But food and metal prices will probably stay at high levels. The cost of bailing out troubled banks while tax revenues shrink and welfare payouts swell will see governments pile on debt and run bigger deficits, the EU executive warns. It says France and Ireland will break EU budget rules in 2009 by running a yearly government deficit of more than 3 percent of GDP. The ceiling is intended to keep their shared currency stable. Britain, Latvia, Lithuania, Romania and Hungary will also likely exceed the limit.
Even though the world crisis has yet to be felt significantly in Croatia, experts are certain that next year will be a lot harder financially, especially in tourism. Žarko Primorac, an economic analyst for Deloitte, says that he is certain that the Croatian economy will feel the repercussions of the crisis, “because it is structured with sectors that are very vulnerable to world trends.” Unions predict drastic falls in the price of apartments in Zagreb only, by as much as EUR 600 per square meter due to oversupply and market stagnation in Croatian capitol. |