The European Commission cut its growth forecast for the Eurozone as the debt crisis ravages southern Europe and gnaws at the economic performance of export-driven Germany. The 17-nation euro economy
will expand 0.1% in 2013, down from a May forecast of 1%, the
Brussels-based commission said. It cut the forecast for Germany,
Europe's largest economy, to 0.8% from 1.7%. Europe's "economy
continues to deal with a difficult post- financial crisis correction,"
Marco Buti, head of the commission's economics department, said in a
statement.
Next year's near-stagnation across Europe masks a north- south divide,
in which the economy ekes out positive numbers along an arc from Finland
through the Low Countries to France, and contraction grips Greece, Spain, Italy, Cyprus, Portugal and Slovenia.
North-south tensions over the debt crisis will bubble up on November 12, when finance
ministers judge whether Greece has made enough budget cuts and economic
reforms to deserve the next installment of 240 billion in aid offered
since 2010.
"The distress in more vulnerable member states has progressively
started to affect the remainder of the union." The economic falloff may
make it harder for European governments to pull Greece back from the brink and deal with a possible aid program for Spain, leaving the debt crisis to fester for a fourth year. Technically, the euro area will avert a recession, defined as two
consecutive quarters of contraction, though the overall economy will
still shrink 0.4% in 2012, ending a two-year expansion, the commission
said.
Euro governments are aiming to wrestle it down to 120% by 2020. Germany is becoming less resistant to the economic woes of southern Europe just as Chancellor Angela Merkel, the dominant figure in handling of the debt crisis, embarks on a campaign for athird term in elections in late 2013.
Buti pointed to "wide cross-country divergences in economic activity
and labor market dynamics" in a common-currency area meant to bring
Europe together, not fracture it. The commission predicted "moderate"
growth of 1.4% in 2014 that leaves Cyprus alone in negative territory.
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