It now stands larger that in did at its peak before the financial
crisis, albeit having taken eight years to recover. The bloc also
slipped back into deflation in April.
Blowing past both the U.S. and British economies, the latter weighed
down by uncertainty over possibly leaving the Europe Union, euro
zone growth doubled from the previous quarter, beating even the most
optimistic expectations on healthy household consumption and a
rebound in investments.
But the surge, a welcome relief less than a year after Greece was
nearly ejected from the bloc, may be just a blip; Europe is still
weighed down by high debt, weak bank profits, high unemployment and
vast excess capacity in the economy.
Nonetheless, growth among the 19 countries sharing the euro jumped
0.6 percent on the quarter, well past expectations for 0.4 percent
and ahead of Britain's 0.4 percent.
The U.S. economy grew 0.5 percent on an annualized basis in the
first quarter, implying only slightly more than 0.12 percent for the
three months.
Annual euro zone growth held steady at 1.6 percent, more than three
times the U.S. rate in the same period.
The numbers defied expectations for a slowdown and were as improved
sentiment, plunging energy costs and a slow but steady fall in
unemployment and buoyed spending.
"The first months of the year were tumultuous with large stock
market declines, growth concerns in the US, China and many emerging
markets and plummeting confidence among businesses and consumers,"
ING economist Bert Colijn said in a note.
"Clearly, businesses and consumers have not acted on their gut
feelings," Colijn said. "Domestic strength in the Eurozone economy
is key to current economic growth. This is mostly because of
improvements in the job market."
Indeed, unemployment in the euro zone, though still high, fell to
10.2 percent in March from 10.4 percent a month earlier, its lowest
in over four years, with Spain among the most improved.
INFLATION NEGATIVE AGAIN
The news was not all positive, however, as fresh inflation data
showed the bloc was back in deflation in April, giving the European
Central Bank its single biggest headache as it struggles to boost
prices.
Consumer prices fell by 0.2 percent compared to a year earlier,
moving down from an unchanged reading March, even after the ECB
unveiled fresh stimulus in December and March in hopes of boosting
inflation, which has undershot its 2 percent target for more than
three years already.
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In a perhaps more worrying sign for policymakers, core inflation,
which excludes volatile energy and food prices, also slowed, raising
fears that low energy prices are feeding into the price of other
goods and services.
The ECB is especially worried about this so-called second round
effect of low crude prices because once they feed into wages,
breaking the cycle of low inflation becomes especially difficult.
Still, ECB chief economist Peter Praet defended the bank's measures
on Friday, arguing that only a significant worsening of the
inflation outlook would warrant more stimulus.
"Deploying negative rates again in the future would require a
distinct worsening of the inflation outlook," Praet told Spanish
newspaper Expansión. "I don’t think we’re going to see these
conditions materializing in the near future."
"We shouldn’t be talking of new instruments," Praet added.
Heading into the second quarter, the euro zone appears to remain on
solid footing.
Indeed, sentiment improved more than expected in April, driven by
across the board optimism among industry, services, construction
sector and households.
Preliminary purchasing managers' data and Germany's Ifo business
climate index also pointed to continued expansion as did fresh
lending data showing the most robust expansion since 2011.
Growth could also get a fresh boost from the ECB's corporate bond
buys and new round of ultra cheap loans.
Still, the first quarter could ultimately turn out to be a peak for
growth, with most projections indicating flatlining growth over the
next several years as Europe remains weighed down by the legacy of
its crisis.
(Additional reporting by Philip Blenkinsop Editing by Jeremy Gaunt)
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