Euro economy shrank at end of 2020 under pandemic’s weight

The German economy, Europe’s biggest, grew by a scant 0.1 percent. in the fourth quarter while France saw a smaller than expected drop of 1.3 percent. (File/AFP)

FRANKFURT, Germany: The European economy shrank by a smaller than expected 0.7% in the last three months of 2020 as businesses in France and Germany weathered a renewed round of anti-COVID-19 lockdowns somewhat better than expected.
That consolation in official figures released Tuesday couldn’t erase a gloomier outlook for this year, as the 19 countries that use the euro are expected to lag China and the US in bouncing back from the worst of the pandemic.
For the year, the eurozone shrank 6.8 percent, according to the EU statistics agency. The figure underscores a rollercoaster year of freakish economic data, with a plunge of 11.7 percent in the second quarter, the biggest since statistics started in 1995, followed by a rebound of 12.4 percent in the third quarter in late summer.
The winter wave has meant new restrictions on travel, business and activity, but companies in some sectors such as manufacturing have been better able to adjust than services businesses such as hotels and restaurants.
The German economy, Europe’s biggest, grew by a scant 0.1 percent in the fourth quarter while France saw a smaller than expected drop of 1.3 percent. Overall, economists had expected a drop in the eurozone of as much as 2.5 percent.
The eurozone is expected to reach 2019 levels of economic output only in 2022, say officials from the European Central Bank. That contrasts with China, the only major economy to grow in 2020 with a 2.3 percent increase in output, and with the US, where Congressional budget experts foresee a rebound to 2019 levels by the middle of this year. The International Monetary Fund last month cut its forecast for eurozone growth this year to 4.2 percent from 5.2 percent.
The figures arrive amid disenchantment and finger-pointing over the slow pace of vaccine rollouts in the European Union, while the UK, which has left the EU, started earlier and has vaccinated people at a faster pace.
“While the eurozone GDP data were better than what we were expecting only a week ago, the short-term prospects for the European economy remain clouded by a challenging health situation in several countries and an underwhelming start of the vaccination roll-out,” said Nicola Nobile, lead eurozone economist at Oxford Economics.