The Never Ending Shrinking European Economy
The United Kingdom's bond rating was just downgraded by Moody's from AAA to AA1, in part due to the U.K.'s austerity measures which repressed economic growth.
The main driver underpinning Moody's decision to downgrade the UK's government bond rating to Aa1 is the increasing clarity that, despite considerable structural economic strengths, the UK's economic growth will remain sluggish over the next few years due to the anticipated slow growth of the global economy and the drag on the UK economy from the ongoing domestic public- and private-sector deleveraging process.
The U.K. downgrade comes on the heals of a terrible European Commission economic report. They forecast the entire EU economy will grow just 0.01% for all of 2013. Even worse, the Eurozone countries' GDP will contract -0.03% for 2013. Unemployment will increase to 11.1% for the EU and 11.3% for the Eurozone countries. Austerity seems to be part of it as budget deficits are projected to shrink by 3.4% in the EU and 2.8% in the Eurozone.

Below is the overall unemployment project graph and that big fat red 2013 forecast line is higher than the unemployment rate in 2012. Six years after the financial crisis the jobs crisis will worsen.

This is just going on and on for Europe. In 2012 real GDP contracted -0.3% for the EU and -0.6% for Eurozone countries as a whole. Austerity is the reason it's so bad. From the European Commission report:
The weakening of global growth and the aggravation of the sovereign-debt crisis in the first half of last year, reflecting high deleveraging needs in the public and private sector, have shackled economic activity throughout 2012 and pushed the euro area back into a recession.
Another reason for the terrible economic projections is a lack of private investment. Seems the never ending sovereign debt crisis took their toil as public funds went to prop up the banks and private investors pulled back and out of Europe. Some countries will remain decimated, such as Spain and Greece. Spain's unemployment rate is project to go even higher, around 27% and Greece is no better off with a forecast 25.7% unemployment rate for 2013. Below is a graph of Spain's official unemployment rate and Greece looks the same, a rocket to unemployment land. Unemployment rates this high are comparable to the darkest days of the 1930's Great Depression.

The report mentions additional risks that could further weak Europe's economy. A large one is America's crazy Congress and political gridlock. Not only will sequestration and hatchet job budget cuts hurt the United States economy, the actions of the U.S. Congress are also threatening Europe.
Significant downside risks also stem from the external environment. Political gridlock in the US is still threatening to result in much sharper fiscal retrenchment in the US by the beginning of March.
The report is just bleak and if anyone recalls, three years ago, 2013 was the year when all would be well. The report also goes to show what propping up Bankster banks at the expense of the people does. It is like cutting off the legs of the economy and then expecting that nation to pull itself back up by it's own bootstraps when their legs are now missing.


Recent comments