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						EU slashes euro zone growth outlook, expects inflation 
						to slow
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		 [February 07, 2019]   
		By Francesco Guarascio 
 BRUSSELS (Reuters) - The European 
		Commission sharply cut on Thursday its forecasts for euro zone economic 
		growth this year and next because it expects the bloc's largest 
		countries to be held back by global trade tensions and an array of 
		domestic challenges.
 
 In its quarterly economic forecasts, the EU executive also revised down 
		its estimates for the inflation in the 19-country currency bloc next 
		year, which now is expected to be lower than forecast by the European 
		Central Bank - likely complicating the bank's plans for an interest rate 
		hike this year.
 
 The Commission said euro zone growth will slow to 1.3 percent this year 
		from 1.9 percent in 2018, before rebounding in 2020 to 1.6 percent.
 
 The new estimates are far less optimistic than those released in 
		November, when Brussels expected the euro zone to grow 1.9 percent this 
		year and 1.7 percent in 2020.
 
 All countries in the 28-state European Union are poised to continue 
		growing, with the bloc expected to post its seventh consecutive year of 
		expansion, but the larger member states will brake significantly.
 
		
		 
		
 The Commission cited global trade tensions and China's slowdown as the 
		main drags on the European Union's economy.
 
 But it also mentioned internal factors as causes for the worsened 
		outlook, notably slower car production in Germany, social tensions in 
		France and "strong uncertainty on budget policies in Italy," EU 
		economics commissioner Pierre Moscovici told a news conference.
 
 The euro fell to a two-week low after the cut in forecasts was released.
 
 In Germany, the bloc's largest economy, growth is expected to slow to 
		1.1 percent this year from 1.5 percent in 2018. The Commission had 
		previously forecast 1.8 percent growth this year.
 
 France's economic expansion is expected to slacken to 1.3 percent this 
		year from 1.5 percent in 2018, after "yellow vest" protests weakened 
		growth over the last months.
 
 Italy, the third largest economy in the euro zone, is expected to post 
		the slowest growth rate in the whole EU with a mere 0.2 percent 
		expansion this year.
 
		
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			European Commissioner for Economic and Financial Affairs Pierre 
			Moscovici presents the EU executive's economic forecasts during a 
			news conference at the EU Commission headquarters in Brussels, 
			Belgium February 7, 2019. REUTERS/Francois Lenoir 
            
			 
All euro zone countries will grow this year at a slower pace than in 2018, the 
commission forecast, except Greece, which after exiting its bailout program in 
2018 is expected to expand by more than 2 percent both this year and next. 
Britain's growth is expected to slow to 1.3 percent this year - a touch higher 
than its previous forecast - up from 1.4 percent in 2018. However, it underlined 
that forecasts on Britain are based on the "technical assumption" that EU-UK 
trade will not be affected by Brexit.
 ECB HEADACHES
 
 The economic slowdown forecast by the Commission is worse than that seen by the 
ECB in its latest projections released in December, when the bank expected the 
euro zone to grow by 1.7 percent this year.
 
The Commission also stressed the outlook was subject to large uncertainty and 
risks of further downward revisions caused mostly by the unclear Brexit process.
 In a further concern for the ECB, the Commission expects euro zone inflation to 
be at 1.4 percent this year, below ECB estimates of 1.6 percent rate, and 
further away from the bank's target of a rate close to 2.0 percent.
 
 Since December, ECB policymakers have said that the bank's forecasts are likely 
to be revised down in March.
 
 Core inflation, which excludes volatile prices and is closely watched by the ECB 
for its policy decisions, will increase gradually, the commission predicted, 
citing positive labor market developments.
 
 (Reporting by Francesco Guarascio in Brussels; additional reporting by Balazs 
Koranyi in Frankfurt; editing by Philip Blenkinsop)
 
				 
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