November 18, 2024

Economix: Hour by Hour, a Measure of Economic Stress

An idled home construction site in Riverside, Calif., in 2009.David McNew/Getty ImagesAn idled home construction site in Riverside, Calif., in 2009.

Ben S. Bernanke, the Federal Reserve chairman, highlighted a relatively obscure measure of economic health, “aggregate hours of production workers,” to make the important point that our economy is not very healthy at all.

The name pretty much explains the statistic: It measures the total number of hours that Americans are paid to work in production jobs, which make up 80 percent of all jobs.

Why not take the measure of all jobs? Well, the Bureau of Labor Statistics has done just that since 2006, and the numbers show a similar decline, but it has tracked production hours since 1964, allowing comparisons with other recessions.

The comparisons, as Mr. Bernanke noted Tuesday, are not good.

Paid hours “fell, remarkably, by nearly 10 percent from the beginning of the recent recession through October 2009,” he said. Moreover, after two years of renewed growth, paid hours remain about 6.5 percent below the prerecession peak.

“For comparison,” Mr. Bernanke continued, “the maximum decline in aggregate hours worked during the deep 1981-82 recession was less than 6 percent.”

No other recession since 1964 has produced a comparable decline in hours worked.

Bureau of Labor StatisticsIndex of aggregate weekly hours, production and nonsupervisory employees, total private industries. (2002=100; shaded areas indicate United States recessions.)

The hours-worked data also highlights a shortcoming of the work-force statistics that garner more public attention, in particular the unemployment rate.

Those statistics basically treat all jobs as equal. But some people are working part-time or a few hours less each week or their employer has stopped authorizing overtime. They have a job but they are working fewer hours and making less money.

A recent article by Steven Kroll, an economist for the Bureau of Labor Statistics, charts the distinction.

In some parts of the labor market, like professional and business services, job cuts almost entirely explain the decline in hours worked. In that area, 9.9 percent of employees lost their jobs, while the number of hours worked fell 10.1 percent.

In other areas, however, job losses significantly understate the decline in paid work. Construction jobs fell 21.5 percent; hours worked fell 24.5 percent. Manufacturing jobs fell 17.3 percent, while the number of hours worked fell 20.3 percent.

The data, Mr. Kroll wrote, “illustrates employers’ tendency to cut payroll employment rather than hours.” In other words, American companies generally choose to lay off one person rather than reducing two people to half-time work.

Because this is Germany week in the blogosphere, I’ll just close by noting that the plentiful body of research noting that German companies generally do the opposite, with the result that a deeper recession produced fewer job losses in that country.

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=5932ea724ccb8439502f9fc28d5f68bf

Stocks Waver as Economic Data Give Mixed Signals

Wednesday’s losses were triggered by reports that suggested that the nation’s economy is slowing. Economic news set the tone again on Thursday.

Before the market opened, the government said first-time applications for unemployment benefits fell to 422,000, a slight dip from the previous week, but still above what economists expected. Applications need to fall below 375,000 to signal that the economy is adding jobs.

The Dow rose 6 points, or 0.1 percent, to 12,295 in early trading. The Standard Poor’s 500 rose 1 point to 1,315. The Nasdaq composite gained 11 points, or 0.4 percent, to 2,780.

Retailers reported mixed sales results. Gap fell 2.3 percent after sales fell across all its brands. Target fell nearly 3 percent after missing expectations as sales traffic slowed during the second half of the month. Costco Wholesale was among the few retailers that did not lose ground. The warehouse retailer gained 0.1 percent after reporting higher revenue, helped in part by international sales.

Fears that the economy is stalling sent the Dow Jones industrial average down 280 points Wednesday, erasing more than a quarter of the stock market’s gains for the year. Treasury bond yields fell to their lowest level since December as traders put a higher value on safer investments.

Many investors are now focused on the government’s monthly employment report, which is scheduled to be released on Friday. Economists expect that the unemployment rate will remain unchanged at 8.9 percent.

In Europe, though, the Euro Stoxx 50 index, a barometer of euro zone blue chips, fell 0.7 percent, with financial shares leading all market sectors lower. The FTSE 100 index in London was down 0.7 percent, the CAC 40 in Paris fell 1.1 percent, and the DAX in Frankfurt fell 1 percent.

Market volume was reduced by market holidays in Sweden and Switzerland, among others, and many European investors were taking a four- or five-day weekend.

Asian shares fell almost across the board. The main Sydney market index, the S.P./ASX 200, fell 2.3 percent. In Hong Kong, the Hang Seng index fell 1.6 percent, and in Shanghai the composite index fell 1.4 percent.

The Nikkei 225 stock average fell 1.7 percent in Tokyo, where Prime Minister Naoto Kan won a no-confidence vote in Parliament. Though his victory was not a surprise, the vote highlighted the deep divisions within the Japanese political establishment that are hampering policy changes that analysts say are needed to revive the Japanese economy after the March 11 earthquake and tsunami.

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=544a9aeee78881594f2645d988269216

Off the Charts: A Jobs Recovery Is Happening Faster for Some Countries Than Others

While much of Europe has been struggling to recover — and countries in financial difficulty have been forced to adopt austerity programs that are likely to stifle economic growth, at least in the short term — German unemployment is at its lowest level since German unification nearly two decades ago.

The accompanying charts show the changes in unemployment in nine countries, as well as for the 34 countries in the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development as a group. They show both the change in the unemployment rate since September 2008 and the change in the number of people out of work. The O.E.C.D. includes major industrialized countries and some leading developing economies.

In Germany, the number of unemployed workers rose 6 percent in the first year after the collapse of Lehman Brothers turned a relatively mild slowdown into what became know as the Great Recession. But the number now has fallen 15 percent below the level of September 2008.

Among the other countries in the O.E.C.D., Luxembourg is the only one to recover all its losses.

The relatively small rise in joblessness in Germany may have been partly because of government programs that encouraged companies to keep workers on reduced hours rather than let them go. The rapid recovery reflects the strength of the German export sector, which was enhanced by the fact that many European countries lost competitiveness because of rising labor costs.

When the downturn began, Germany had about 25 percent of the population in the euro zone and a similar share of the unemployed workers. Its population share is about the same now, but it has only 17 percent of the unemployed.

If the euro zone were a fiscal union rather than just a monetary one, there would have been automatic subsidies through unemployment benefits and other programs for the weaker areas. If there were easy labor mobility in the zone, more workers would have moved to Germany. If there were separate currencies, the German mark would have appreciated against the other European currencies.

As it is, none of that happened. Many Germans resent the need to bail out other countries, and many people in those countries resent being forced to cut wages and payrolls in the name of restoring competitiveness.

The unemployment figures show how much the labor situation has worsened in Ireland and Greece, the first two countries to seek bailouts. But it may be a surprise that unemployment in the Iberian peninsula is worse in Spain, which has not needed help, than in Portugal, which does need assistance. Similarly, France and Italy have seen joblessness rise at roughly the same pace, although Italy is widely thought to be in worse shape economically.

The other chart shows two major countries not in the euro zone. Unemployment grew faster in the United States than in Britain, but Britain has shown little improvement while the United States has begun to recover.

Floyd Norris comments on finance and the economy on his blog at nytimes.com/norris.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/05/14/business/economy/14charts.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

U.S. Unemployment Filings Rose Last Week

WASHINGTON (AP) — The number of people applying for unemployment benefits surged last week to the highest level in eight months, a sign that the job market continues to struggle to gain any momentum.

The Labor Department said Thursday that applications rose by 43,000 to 474,000 in the week ended April 30, the third increase in four weeks. The four-week average, a less volatile measure, rose for the fourth consecutive week to 431,250.

Applications near 375,000 are typically consistent with sustainable job growth. Weekly applications peaked during the recession at 659,000.

Rising unemployment applications and other weak economic data this week have prompted some analysts to worry that higher fuel prices may be causing employers to slow their pace of hiring.

The government will release its April jobs report on Friday. Economists are projecting that the economy probably added 185,000 jobs in April and the unemployment rate may remain 8.8 percent, but some are now saying the numbers of added jobs could be lower.

A department spokesman blamed much of the increase on an unexpected spike in applications from New York, where more school systems than usual closed for spring break last week. That resulted in 25,000 layoffs. The department did not anticipate the closures when making seasonal adjustments, the spokesman said.

Other factors also contributed to the increase, the spokesman said. Oregon started its own extended unemployment benefit program, which caused an increase in overall applications in the state for unemployment benefits. And auto-related layoffs rose, as some companies have shut down or slowed production because of parts shortages stemming from the earthquake in Japan.

Still, applications have risen sharply in recent weeks, raising concerns that high gasoline and food prices are cutting into consumer spending and slowing the economy. Businesses are also facing higher costs for raw materials, which reduce profit margins. They may be cutting back on hiring as a cost-saving measure.

Other recent data have also pointed to a weaker job market. A private trade group said Wednesday that a measure of employment growth in the service sector, which employs 90 percent of the work force, slowed for a second month. The report, by the Institute for Supply Management, still showed that employment rose, but at the slowest pace in seven months.

In a second report, American companies squeezed more work out of their staffs in the first three months, but the gain in productivity was much slower than the previous three months.

The Labor Department said productivity rose at an annual rate of 1.6 percent in the January-March period compared to a 2.9 percent increase in the previous quarter. Labor costs rose at a 1 percent annual rate in the quarter after falling 1 percent in the previous three months.

A slowdown in productivity growth is bad for the economy if it persists for a long period. But it can be good in the short term when unemployment is high, because it signals companies must hire more workers in order to make further gains.

Analysts expect productivity will slow to around 2 percent growth. They say companies are reaching the limits on how much they can get from their existing work forces.

Employment growth has picked up in recent months. Businesses added more than 200,000 workers in both February and March — the first time that has happened in five years. The unemployment rate fell to a two-year low of 8.8 percent in March.

During the recession, companies found ways to produce more goods and services with fewer workers. Greater productivity helped them bolster profits. But it also allowed them to hold back on hiring after companies slashed millions of jobs during the downturn.

Productivity is the amount of output per hour of work. The Federal Reserve watches this figure carefully. Increases in productivity allow companies to pay workers more without being forced to raise the prices of their products, which can cause inflation.

The cost of labor per unit of output is expected to return to positive territory this year after having falling in both 2009 and 2010. However, the increase is expected to be well below levels that would signal wage pressures, which could trigger inflation concerns.

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=67b6d1f9f0dfba282872c39fac147e94

High & Low Finance: For the Fed, a Narrowing of Options

It makes sense to think the pause in growth will be temporary. Part of the first-quarter slowdown was caused by a weakness in the growth rate of exports that should not endure as developing economies continue to expand. There was also severe weather, which if anything should accelerate second-quarter growth with catch-up spending. And military spending declined.

With all those things, the economy grew at a 1.8 percent annual rate, according to the first estimate released by the government on Thursday.

To make the case for a rebound even stronger, the commentary from companies reporting first-quarter earnings has generally been upbeat. They are continuing to see sales rise, and profits are looking good. They are more awash in cash than ever, and many of them say they plan to hire more American workers. The recent surprise in unemployment numbers has been in how rapidly they fell.

This week, even as the Fed was lowering its forecast for economic growth in 2011, it was also lowering its expectations for unemployment. It had no choice. Back in January the consensus among Fed officials was that the unemployment rate would be 8.8 to 9 percent in the final quarter of 2011. It has already fallen to 8.8 percent, and the new consensus, of 8.4 to 8.7 percent, could be far too pessimistic if companies mean what they say about hiring.

But there could be a sign of possible problems in, of all places, China.

China’s steel prices, which had been rising rapidly, started to slide in mid-February. They bounced back for a week after the earthquake and tsunami in Japan, but have slipped since then.

What does that mean? Maybe nothing. China’s steel market is a wondrous combination of socialism and capitalism. Chinese steel is mostly sold through markets where prices can bounce wildly, and traders seek to profit from volatility. There are few good statistics on such basic things as inventories, making markets nervous about any change in direction. The producers are mostly government-owned companies, often managed by local governments more interested in jobs than profits. (Can you imagine such a thing in a developed economy?)

So Chinese steel statistics must be approached with caution.

One interpretation of the slipping prices is that the pre-tsunami decline was just market noise, and that the decline since then represents a correct analysis that Japan will be importing a lot less steel as manufacturing is interrupted by parts shortages. There is talk that the Japanese economy will shrink at a rate of 5 to 8 percent in the second quarter.

A steel analyst I have trusted for many years, Michelle Applebaum, the managing partner of Steel Market Intelligence, an equity research firm, cautioned me against leaping to conclusions, but added that if the decline in Chinese prices continued, “then, of course, it would be indicative that their rate of growth is slowing.” China, she said, is “growing in a very steel-intensive way.”

That is a prospect that should make the world at least a little nervous. China grew at an annual rate of 9.7 percent in the first quarter, according to official statistics. Europe, meanwhile, seems determined to impose austerity and debt reduction at the same time the European Central Bank raises interest rates.

Think of China as the primary engine of world growth and Europe as a brake. The world may not grow much if that engine starts to stutter before the old primary engine — the United States — starts to rev up.

China’s government keeps vowing to do something to slow its inflation, and has been trying to discourage credit growth and reduce the volume of new construction projects. In the West, there has been general disbelief that it could possibly succeed. After all, by tying the renminbi to the dollar, China has effectively turned over its monetary policy to Mr. Bernanke and his colleagues, whose dual mandate of promoting American growth and fighting American inflation says nothing about stopping China from overheating.

China’s economy may well not be slowing. Perhaps the steel figures represent government efforts to hold down reported inflation by putting pressure on producers, à la President John F. Kennedy and United States Steel in 1962. But all good things come to an end, and someday China’s growth rate will slow. By then, the world may no longer need the help. But it does now.

The Fed has been doing everything it can to stimulate the American economy, but has been rewarded for its efforts with denunciations. Liberals gripe that it is not doing enough to bring down unemployment. Conservatives complain that it is encouraging inflation by printing money. To hear some of them tell it, Mr. Bernanke is a member of the Obama administration who is destroying the currency to help the president win re-election.

That is not how you would expect conservatives to view a man who used to be chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers under George W. Bush, but these days many Republicans view Mr. Bush as something of a heretic for raising government spending.

Monetary policy is clearly on hold now. Mr. Bernanke may or may not think it is a good idea to end the Fed’s purchases of longer-term Treasuries — the program known as QE2, for quantitative easing. But he had no choice, given the political realities.

The Fed is caught in a bind, with inflation rising and growth perhaps slowing. “A surge in commodity prices unavoidably impairs performance with respect to both aspects of the Federal Reserve’s dual mandate,” Janet L. Yellin, the Fed’s vice chairwoman, pointed out in her talk to the Economic Club of New York earlier this month. “Such shocks push up unemployment and raise inflation. A policy easing might alleviate the effects on employment but would tend to exacerbate the inflationary effects; conversely, policy firming might mitigate the rise in inflation but would contribute to an even weaker economic recovery.”

For much of the last two years, growth in federal government spending helped. But now, that spending is falling. And state and local government spending, adjusted for inflation, is at its lowest level in nine years.

The American outlook would be much worse if there really was much chance of a rapid reduction in government spending, as the politicians say they want. With the recovery stumbling, tighter monetary and fiscal policy could be disastrous. But it is probable that there will be no deal and that after a new episode of “The Perils of Pauline,” the debt ceiling will be raised and a temporary deal worked out that makes no one happy.

The risk is that if things do get worse, perhaps because that fall in Chinese steel prices really does mean something, the government will be impotent. Stalemate could keep fiscal policy in neutral or worse, and political pressures could prevent any monetary easing until it is far too late to prevent a new downturn.

Let’s hope that Mr. Bernanke is right to think both the slow growth rate of the first quarter and the rise in inflation are transitory phenomena.

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=a1b17f4ed4234ad88ff230a3eb0a86d2

High & Low Finance: Slower Growth, Higher Prices: Tight Spot for the Fed

It makes sense to think the pause in growth will be temporary. Part of the first-quarter slowdown was caused by a weakness in the growth rate of exports that should not endure as developing economies continue to expand. There was also severe weather, which if anything should accelerate second-quarter growth with catch-up spending. And military spending declined.

With all those things, the economy grew at a 1.8 percent annual rate, according to the first estimate released by the government on Thursday.

To make the case for a rebound even stronger, the commentary from companies reporting first-quarter earnings has generally been upbeat. They are continuing to see sales rise, and profits are looking good. They are more awash in cash than ever, and many of them say they plan to hire more American workers. The recent surprise in unemployment numbers has been in how rapidly they fell.

This week, even as the Fed was lowering its forecast for economic growth in 2011, it was also lowering its expectations for unemployment. It had no choice. Back in January the consensus among Fed officials was that the unemployment rate would be 8.8 to 9 percent in the final quarter of 2011. It has already fallen to 8.8 percent, and the new consensus, of 8.4 to 8.7 percent, could be far too pessimistic if companies mean what they say about hiring.

But there could be a sign of possible problems in, of all places, China.

China’s steel prices, which had been rising rapidly, started to slide in mid-February. They bounced back for a week after the earthquake and tsunami in Japan, but have slipped since then.

What does that mean? Maybe nothing. China’s steel market is a wondrous combination of socialism and capitalism. Chinese steel is mostly sold through markets where prices can bounce wildly, and traders seek to profit from volatility. There are few good statistics on such basic things as inventories, making markets nervous about any change in direction. The producers are mostly government-owned companies, often managed by local governments more interested in jobs than profits. (Can you imagine such a thing in a developed economy?)

So Chinese steel statistics must be approached with caution.

One interpretation of the slipping prices is that the pre-tsunami decline was just market noise, and that the decline since then represents a correct analysis that Japan will be importing a lot less steel as manufacturing is interrupted by parts shortages. There is talk that the Japanese economy will shrink at a rate of 5 to 8 percent in the second quarter.

A steel analyst I have trusted for many years, Michelle Applebaum, the managing partner of Steel Market Intelligence, an equity research firm, cautioned me against leaping to conclusions, but added that if the decline in Chinese prices continued, “then, of course, it would be indicative that their rate of growth is slowing.” China, she said, is “growing in a very steel-intensive way.”

That is a prospect that should make the world at least a little nervous. China grew at an annual rate of 9.7 percent in the first quarter, according to official statistics. Europe, meanwhile, seems determined to impose austerity and debt reduction at the same time the European Central Bank raises interest rates.

Think of China as the primary engine of world growth and Europe as a brake. The world may not grow much if that engine starts to stutter before the old primary engine — the United States — starts to rev up.

China’s government keeps vowing to do something to slow its inflation, and has been trying to discourage credit growth and reduce the volume of new construction projects. In the West, there has been general disbelief that it could possibly succeed. After all, by tying the renminbi to the dollar, China has effectively turned over its monetary policy to Mr. Bernanke and his colleagues, whose dual mandate of promoting American growth and fighting American inflation says nothing about stopping China from overheating.

China’s economy may well not be slowing. Perhaps the steel figures represent government efforts to hold down reported inflation by putting pressure on producers, à la President John F. Kennedy and United States Steel in 1962. But all good things come to an end, and someday China’s growth rate will slow. By then, the world may no longer need the help. But it does now.

The Fed has been doing everything it can to stimulate the American economy, but has been rewarded for its efforts with denunciations. Liberals gripe that it is not doing enough to bring down unemployment. Conservatives complain that it is encouraging inflation by printing money. To hear some of them tell it, Mr. Bernanke is a member of the Obama administration who is destroying the currency to help the president win re-election.

That is not how you would expect conservatives to view a man who used to be chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers under George W. Bush, but these days many Republicans view Mr. Bush as something of a heretic for raising government spending.

Monetary policy is clearly on hold now. Mr. Bernanke may or may not think it is a good idea to end the Fed’s purchases of longer-term Treasuries — the program known as QE2, for quantitative easing. But he had no choice, given the political realities.

The Fed is caught in a bind, with inflation rising and growth perhaps slowing. “A surge in commodity prices unavoidably impairs performance with respect to both aspects of the Federal Reserve’s dual mandate,” Janet L. Yellin, the Fed’s vice chairwoman, pointed out in her talk to the Economic Club of New York earlier this month. “Such shocks push up unemployment and raise inflation. A policy easing might alleviate the effects on employment but would tend to exacerbate the inflationary effects; conversely, policy firming might mitigate the rise in inflation but would contribute to an even weaker economic recovery.”

For much of the last two years, growth in federal government spending helped. But now, that spending is falling. And state and local government spending, adjusted for inflation, is at its lowest level in nine years.

The American outlook would be much worse if there really was much chance of a rapid reduction in government spending, as the politicians say they want. With the recovery stumbling, tighter monetary and fiscal policy could be disastrous. But it is probable that there will be no deal and that after a new episode of “The Perils of Pauline,” the debt ceiling will be raised and a temporary deal worked out that makes no one happy.

The risk is that if things do get worse, perhaps because that fall in Chinese steel prices really does mean something, the government will be impotent. Stalemate could keep fiscal policy in neutral or worse, and political pressures could prevent any monetary easing until it is far too late to prevent a new downturn.

Let’s hope that Mr. Bernanke is right to think both the slow growth rate of the first quarter and the rise in inflation are transitory phenomena.

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=c44a1d7065f4279444ef96c923b8b5c2

Uneven Nature of Recovery Highlighted in Europe

PARIS — The uneven nature of the European recovery was underlined by data released Thursday, which showed prices rising and weak consumption across the euro zone. Portugal’s budget situation worsened even as the economic picture in France and Germany improved.

Officials in Portugal blamed the higher-than-expected deficit figure for 2010 on changes in accounting rules. But coming on the heels of a government collapse and two downgrades, investors sent yields on its 10-year bonds soaring to a new euro-era high, raising the pressure as the country struggles to avoid having to ask for a financial rescue.

Portugal’s woes are worsened by a weak economy and rising prices.

For the entire euro area, the European Union’s statistics agency reported that annual inflation rose to 2.6 percent in March from 2.4 percent in February, according to an initial estimate.

Analysts said higher oil and food prices remained the main factors behind the rise. But they added that the tightening labor market in countries such as Germany, as well as potential price increases by companies facing higher commodity costs, are likely to push up core inflation over the coming months. Core inflation excludes the more volatile energy and food categories.

The Federal Labor Agency in Germany reported that the largest economy in Europe continued to add jobs in March. German unemployment dropped by a seasonally adjusted 55,000 for the month, bringing the jobless rate down to 7.1 percent, from 7.3 percent in February. It was the lowest unemployment rate since the country’s reunification in 1990, according to economists.

At the same time, a separate report from the Federal Statistical Office showed that German retail sales fell by 0.3 percent in February from January, when they had risen 0.4 percent.

Carsten Brzeski, at analyst at ING in Brussels, said the data “again illustrated the German economy’s main dilemma: While the labor market remains the show case of the recovery, private consumption is still sluggish.”

The strong job market is only gradually lifting consumption because many of the jobs created pay low wages, while higher energy prices have dampened spending, he said.

The latest data have solidified expectations that the European Central Bank next week will raise borrowing costs for the euro area, given that inflation is riding well above its comfort zone of just below 2 percent. Analysts at Barclays Capital said there is also a growing expectation such an increase might be repeated.

Chiara Corsa, an economist at UniCredit Bank in Milan, said euro-zone inflation was likely to pick up throughout the summer, before starting to decline at the turn of the year. UniCredit expects an average 2.6 percent in 2011 and 2 percent next year.

In Lisbon, the national statistical office said that Portugal’s budget deficit last year was 8.6 percent of G.D.P., well above the target of 7.3 percent. The finance minister Fernando Texeira dos Santos said that the difference was due to new E.U. accounting rules, and not as a result of unreported items, Reuters reported.

He said the impact on public accounts would be limited to 2010 and that the 2011 budget goal would not be at risk. He also said the caretaker government would have enough funds to meet obligations until a new government takes office.

Yields on Portuguese government bonds pushed to fresh records as investors bet on a near-term bailout. The benchmark 10-year issue rose 21 basis points to 8.1 percent, while the 2-year note climbed 53 basis points to stand at 8.2 percent, showing that the same high returns are now being demanded for holding Portuguese paper of all maturities. Spanish and Irish yields also climbed.

By contrast, the French statistics agency reported Thursday that the country registered a narrower budget deficit of 7 percent of gross domestic product last year, from 7.5 percent in 2009 and was under the government’s own target, which had initially stood at 8.5 percent.

Germany had a budget shortfall of 3.3 percent of G.D.P. last year, the according to data released last month.

Nevertheless, President Nicolas Sarkozy, currently in Asia, was quick to claim credit for the better than expected performance in France, which is likely to feature as a key theme in next year’s presidential election.

His office issued a statement saying that the data confirmed the effectiveness of government’s strategy based on economic reforms and strict spending control, “while refusing a general increase in taxes, which would prejudice growth and competitiveness.”

The ratings agency Fitch displayed less optimism for the region as a whole. It lowered its economic forecasts Thursday, “reflecting the persistent drag from fiscal consolidation, as well as lower consumption and tighter monetary policy in the context of higher oil prices.”

Fitch reduced its euro area G.D.P. forecast by 0.4 percentage point to 1.2 percent for this year, and by 0.3 percentage point to 1.8 percent for 2012.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/01/business/global/01euecon.html?partner=rss&emc=rss