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European Commission predicts 'turning point' in Europe | European Commission predicts 'turning point' in Europe |
(35 minutes later) | |
The European Commission has said the European economy has reached a "turning point", but the eurozone will grow less quickly than previously expected. | |
The Commission said there were "signs of hope" that had started to turn into "tangible positive outcomes". | |
But in the eurozone - the 18 nations that use the euro - it predicted growth of 1.1% next year. | |
This is the second downward revision of eurozone growth this year, after it was reduced from 1.4% to 1.2% in May. | |
The Commission forecast that the eurozone would grow 1.7% in 2015. In the EU as a whole, it expects 1.4% growth next year and 1.9% in 2015. | |
It said overall EU growth would be flat this year, up from its May forecast, but unemployment would stay at 11.1%. | |
On an individual country basis, the Commission significantly upgraded its forecasts for the UK from 0.6% to 1.3% for this year and from 1.7% to 2.2% for next year. | |
"[The year] 2013 has thus far exceeded expectations and the outlook is quite bright," the report said on the UK. | |
Recovery 'gradual' | |
"There are increasing signs that the European economy has reached a turning point," said Olli Rehn, commissioner for economic and monetary affairs. | |
But Mr Rehn warned unemployment would stay high. | |
"It is too early to declare victory: unemployment remains at unacceptably high levels," he added. | |
The Commission now expects unemployment for the eurozone next year to stay at its current level of 12.2%, up from its previous forecast of 12.1%. | |
It also expects unemployment to improve only gradually, staying around the current level for the next two years and only dropping to 11.8% in 2015. | |
The Commission also warned that it expected the recovery to be gradual. | |
"While the financial market situation has improved significantly and interest rates have declined for vulnerable countries, this has not yet fed through to the real economy," Mr Rehn said. | "While the financial market situation has improved significantly and interest rates have declined for vulnerable countries, this has not yet fed through to the real economy," Mr Rehn said. |
In the eurozone - the 18 member states which use the euro - the Commission predicted growth of 1.1% next year, down from its May forecast of 1.2%, and 1.7% in 2015. | |
The Commission blamed weaker investment and the fact it expected inflation to stay below the central bank target over the next two years. | The Commission blamed weaker investment and the fact it expected inflation to stay below the central bank target over the next two years. |
It also expects unemployment in the eurozone to improve only gradually, expecting it to stay around current levels for two more years and only dropping to 11.8% in 2015. | It also expects unemployment in the eurozone to improve only gradually, expecting it to stay around current levels for two more years and only dropping to 11.8% in 2015. |
The Commission also expects Greece's recession this year to be slightly less severe than its earlier forecast, predicting a fall in growth of 4% this year, compared with its earlier prediction of a 4.2% fall. | |