War, inflation hit French, German consumer morale more
than feared
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[March 29, 2022] By
Leigh Thomas and Zuzanna Szymanska
PARIS (Reuters) -France and Germany saw
bigger than expected drops in consumer confidence this month as
government steps to help with rising fuel costs and other inflation gave
little relief following the impact of Russia's invasion of Ukraine,
surveys showed on Tuesday.
The European Central Bank says it remains confident the euro zone can
avoid an all-out recession, but the collapse in consumer morale in its
two biggest economies quashed hopes of a sharp bounce back after
COVID-19 restrictions were eased.
"In February, hopes were still high that consumer sentiment would
recover with the easing of pandemic-related restrictions. However, the
war in Ukraine caused these hopes to vanish into thin air," GfK consumer
expert Rolf Buerkl said in a statement.
In Germany, the GfK institute said its consumer sentiment index, based
on a survey of around 2,000 people, dropped to -15.5 points heading into
April from a revised -8.5 points a month earlier and the lowest since
February 2021.
Economists polled by Reuters had on average expected the index to drop
to -14.0.
In France, the INSEE official statistics agency said its consumer
confidence index fell to 91 points from 97 in February, falling short of
economists' expectations in a Reuters poll for 94 and the worst headline
figure since February 2021.
"A fall of that extent is rare," BNP analysts commented in a note that
observed that sharper monthly drops had only previously occurred around
the 1993 recession and the 2020 lockdown.
NO PRE-ELECTION BOUNCE
The result also ran counter to the improving trend usually seen ahead of
presidential elections when optimism rises that a new political order
will translate into improved standards of living.
Ahead of next month's French election, the government has put together a
package of measures worth 25 billion euros ($27 billion) to reduce the
pain of high energy prices and inflation.
But that did little to ease inflation fears with the proportion of
households expecting inflation to increase jumping by 50 points to its
highest since INSEE's survey began in 1972.
As part of the government measures, France has capped increases in gas
and power prices, made one-off anti-inflation payouts to low-income
households and offered a rebate on fuel prices.
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A shopper pays with a euro bank note in a market in Nice, France,
April 3, 2019. REUTERS/Eric Gaillard
In Germany, the ruling coalition agreed last week on a second package of
measures in as many months to give people relief from soaring power, heating and
fuel costs.
Under the 17 billion euro package, German workers and families will receive
extra public cash, a tax cut on petrol and cut-price public transport tickets.
Separately, the trade union-linked IMK institute forecast Germany's economy
would grow more slowly than expected and could even contract this year due to
the war in Ukraine.
Its analysts predicted a base scenario of 2.1% growth - less than half the 4.5%
they saw for 2022 back in December - but said a worst-case scenario including
much higher energy prices could even see a 0.3% contraction.
The deteriorating consumer confidence is not limited to France and Germany.
Based on a flash estimate last Wednesday, euro zone sentiment collapsed in March
to 18.7 points, the lowest level since the start of the COVID-19 crisis in April
and May 2020.
Italy, the euro zone's third-largest economy, also saw a bigger than expected
decline in consumer confidence, the national statistics office said last week.
The Ukraine war also caused the steepest decline in Belgian consumer confidence
since records began in 1985, while Dutch consumer morale dropped to its lowest
level in nine years in March.
Economists polled by Reuters this month expect the euro zone to grow 3.8% this
year and 2.5% next, marginally down from 3.9% and 2.5% predicted last month.
($1 = 0.9057 euros)
(Reporting by Leigh Thomas in Paris and Zuzanna Szymanska in Berlin, additional
reporting by Philip Blenkinsop in Brussels and Bart Meijer in Amsterdam; Editing
by Raissa Kasolowsky and Barbara Lewis)
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