Eurozone Economic Growth Forecast Cut

A major international organization has cut its growth forecast for the countries that use the euro and says the troubled currency union needs even more stimulus from the central bank and governments.

FRANKFURT, Germany (AP) — A major international organization has cut its growth forecast for the countries that use the euro and says the troubled currency union needs even more stimulus from the central bank and governments.

The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, a think tank dealing with the world's developed countries, cut its forecasts for the eurozone this year to 0.8 percent from 1.2 percent in its May assessment.

The Paris-based OECD also cut its growth forecasts for the U.S. and several other large economies but said the global economy overall was continuing a moderate if uneven recovery. The outlook for the U.S. was cut to 2.1 percent from 2.6 percent and for Japan to 0.9 percent from 1.2 percent. Italy, one of the more troubled economies in Europe, was downgraded from 0.5 percent to minus 0.4 percent.

The OECD singled out the 18-country eurozone for special attention, saying the European Central Bank needs to do more to help growth in the eurozone, including large-scale bond purchases, to expand the amount of money in the financial system - a move known as quantitative easing. It also called on governments to loosen spending within the flexibility afforded by European Union rules limiting deficits and debt.

The ECB has already taken a number of steps aimed at supporting a weak recovery. It has cut its benchmark interest rate to a record low of 0.05 percent, offered long-term cheap loans to banks on condition they lend to companies, and said it will buy bonds made up of loans to companies as another way to boost credit to businesses.

The OECD said "growth remains weak in the euro area, which runs the risk of prolonged stagnation if further steps are not taken to boost demand" and that "further measures, including quantitative easing, are warranted."

The U.S. Federal Reserve, Bank of Japan and Bank of England have all tried quantitative easing. The ECB has not ruled it out, but the step is more complicated in a currency union with 18 countries.

The world economy continues to grow but forecasts are uneven across countries. China is expected to grow 7.4 percent his year but Brazil only 0.3 percent after falling into recession in the first half.

The OECD's acting chief economist, Rintaro Tamaki, said labor markets in the developed world were only slowly improving, "with far too many people still unable to find good jobs worldwide."


More from MBTMag.com

GM Expert Says 19 Deaths Eligible For Compensation

U.S. Factory Output Drops In August

Safety Agency Investigates Ford Fiestas

Explore more news here.

More in Operations